Similar pattern, different paths: tracing the biogeographical history of Megaloptera (Insecta: Neuropterida) using mitochondrial phylogenomics

Author:

Jiang Yunlan1,Yue Lu1,Yang Fan12,Gillung Jessica P.34,Winterton Shaun L.3,Price Benjamin W.5,Contreras‐Ramos Atilano6,Hayashi Fumio7,Aspöck Ulrike89,Aspöck Horst10,Yeates David K.11,Yang Ding1,Liu Xingyue1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Entomology China Agricultural University Beijing 100193 China

2. Beijing Customs Beijing China

3. California Department of Food and Agriculture California State Collection of Arthropods 3294 Meadowview Rd Sacramento CA USA

4. Department of Natural Resource Sciences McGill University Sainte‐Anne‐de‐Bellevue Canada

5. Natural History Museum London UK

6. Departamento de Zoología Instituto de Biología Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Mexico City Mexico

7. Department of Biology Tokyo Metropolitan University Tokyo Japan

8. Department of Entomology Natural History Museum Vienna Burgring 7 Vienna A‐1010 Austria

9. Department of Integrative Zoology University of Vienna Althanstraße 14 Vienna 1090 Austria

10. Institute of Specific Prophylaxis and Tropical Medicine Medical Parasitology Medical University of Vienna Kinderspitalgasse 15 Vienna A‐1090 Austria

11. Australian National Insect Collection National Research Collections Australia CSIRO PO Box 1700 Canberra ACT 2601 Australia

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Chinese Universities Scientific Fund

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference79 articles.

1. Dobbertinia reticulata Handlirsch 1920 from the Lower Jurassic of Dobbertin (Mecklenburg/Germany)—the oldest representative of Sialidae (Megaloptera);Ansorge J.;N. Jb. Geol. Paläontol. Mh.,2001

2. Correlating early evolution of parasitic platyhelminths to Gondwana breakup;Badets M.;Syst. Entomol.,2011

3. A well‐resolved transcriptomic phylogeny of the mite harvestman family Pettalidae (Arachnida, Opiliones, Cyphophthalmi) reveals signatures of Gondwanan vicariance;Baker C.M.;J. Biogeogr.,2020

4. A Southern Hemisphere origin for campanulid angiosperms, with traces of the break‐up of Gondwana;Beaulieu J.M.;BMC Evol. Biol.,2013

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