Climate Relicts: Asian Scorpion Family Pseudochactidae Survived Miocene Aridification in Caves of the Annamite Mountains

Author:

Loria Stephanie F123ORCID,Ehrenthal Valentin L34,Nguyen Anh D56,Prendini Lorenzo1

Affiliation:

1. Scorpion Systematics Research Group, Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History , New York, NY , USA

2. Richard Gilder Graduate School, American Museum of Natural History , New York, NY , USA

3. Section Arachnology and Myriapodology, Museum of Nature Hamburg – Zoology, Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change , Hamburg , Germany

4. Department of Biology, University of Hamburg , Hamburg , Germany

5. Institute of Ecology and Biological Resources, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology , Caugiay, Hanoi , Vietnam

6. Graduate University of Science and Technology, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology , Caugiay, Hanoi , Vietnam

Abstract

Abstract Southeast Asia is a hotspot of karst systems in the tropics and many relictual taxa have been documented in caves across the region. The ancient, relictual scorpion family Pseudochactidae Gromov 1998 has a disjunct distribution and includes two hypogean subfamilies from caves in the Khammouan-Phong Nha-Kẻ Bàng Karst in the northern Annamite (Trường Sơn) Mountains of Laos and Vietnam, and one epigean subfamily from Central Asia. A recent revision identified six species in the family; however, how these taxa dispersed and diversified into Southeast Asian cave systems has not been tested. In the present contribution, the phylogeny of Pseudochactidae is reconstructed using three mitochondrial and three nuclear markers and 140 morphological characters, divergence time and ancestral range estimation analyses are conducted, and the evolution of troglomorphic characters is investigated. Results confirm a previous hypothesis that Pseudochactidae originated in Eurasia, most likely near the Tajik block in the Carboniferous, supporting the ‘Out of Eurasia’ hypothesis and contradicting the ‘Eurogondwana’ and ‘Out of India’ hypotheses for the origin of Southeast Asian scorpions. Pseudochactidae dispersed across Southeast Asia after the collision of the Cimmerian continent and Indochina with Eurasia in the Late Jurassic. Colonization of Southeast Asian caves began in the Late Cretaceous and was completed by the Miocene. The onset of aridification in Southeast Asia during the Late Miocene resulted in the extinction of epigean Pseudochactidae, whereas hypogean members of the family likely survived within caves in the limestone massifs of the Annamite Mountains, supporting the ‘Climate Relict’ hypothesis.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement

Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst

German Academic Exchange Service

Richard Lounsbery Foundation

Stavros Niarchos Foundation

Explorers Club

National Geographic Society

Vietnam Ministry of Science and Technology

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Insect Science,Developmental Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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