Reconstructing ancient dispersal through Antarctica: A case study of stream‐inhabiting beetles

Author:

Sýkora Vít1ORCID,Herrera‐Alsina Leonel2ORCID,Maier Crystal3ORCID,Martínez‐Román Nicolás Rafael4ORCID,Archangelsky Miguel4ORCID,Bilton David T.56ORCID,Seidel Matthias7ORCID,Leschen Richard A. B.8ORCID,Fikáček Martin910ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Science Charles University Prague Czech Republic

2. School of Biological Sciences University of Aberdeen Aberdeen UK

3. Museum of Comparative Zoology Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts USA

4. Laboratorio de Investigaciones en Ecología y Sistemática Animal (LIESA) Centro de Investigaciones Esquel de Montaña y Estepa Patagónica (CIEMEP) (CONICET e UNPSJB) Esquel Chubut Argentina

5. Marine Biology and Ecology Research Centre School of Biological and Marine Sciences University of Plymouth UK

6. Department of Zoology University of Johannesburg Johannesburg South Africa

7. Zweite Zoologische Abteilung Naturhistorisches Museum Wien Vienna Austria

8. New Zealand Arthropod Collection Manaaki – Whenua Landcare Research Auckland New Zealand

9. Department of Biological Sciences National Sun Yat‐sen University Kaohsiung Taiwan

10. Department of Entomology National Museum Prague Czech Republic

Abstract

AbstractAimAlthough Antarctica hosted a diverse fauna and flora in the past, its modern climate is too extreme for many lineages: their recent extinction makes it difficult to include the continent in historical biogeographical analyses. We use southern temperate stream‐inhabiting beetles as a model to explore whether Antarctica may be included in historical biogeographic reconstructions in a group absent from Antarctica today, and to test its role in shaping the current distribution of stream‐inhabiting insects.TaxonColeoptera, Elmidae.LocationSouthern Hemisphere temperate regions and Antarctica.MethodsWe included Antarctica in historical biogeographic analyses indirectly, as a component of distance matrices specifying the relative positions of continents, or by specifying Antarctica as a stepping‐stone between remaining continents (in LEMAD). We used a newly constructed dated phylogeny of Elmidae to test the performance of these constrained analyses under different parameter settings and geographical scenarios.ResultsAntarctica can be implemented into historical biogeographic analyses via indirect constraints to produce biologically relevant reconstructions when long‐distance dispersal events are highly penalized, the maximum number of areas per species is low, and expected extinction rates are high (in LEMAD). Unconstrained models, including those without Antarctica, result in simpler scenarios with fewer biogeographic events and better fit to data. The origin of austral clades of Elmidae post‐date the separation of Gondwanan landmasses.Main ConclusionsAntarctica can be included in historical biogeographic reconstructions under a priori assumptions that (1) it was part of the ancient biogeography of the clade, (2) the taxon has limited dispersal ability, making long‐distance dispersal highly unlikely and (3) maximum range size is limited. These assumptions may be biologically justified for many animal groups. Over‐water dispersal has been crucial in shaping the modern distribution of austral stream‐inhabiting beetles, likely facilitated by ocean currents and dispersal through Antarctica until the Oligocene.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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