The other side of the Sahulian coin: biogeography and evolution of Melanesian forest dragons (Agamidae)

Author:

Tallowin Oliver J S1ORCID,Meiri Shai23ORCID,Donnellan Stephen C4,Richards Stephen J5,Austin Christopher C6,Oliver Paul M78ORCID

Affiliation:

1. UN Environment World Conservation Monitoring Centre, Cambridge, UK

2. School of Zoology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel

3. The Steinhardt Museum of Natural History, Tel Aviv University, Israel

4. Centre for Evolutionary Biology and Biodiversity, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia

5. South Australian Museum, Adelaide, SA, Australia

6. Department of Biological Sciences, Museum of Natural Science, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USA

7. Environmental Futures Research Institute, Griffith University, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

8. Biodiversity and Geosciences Program, Queensland Museum, South Brisbane, QLD, Australia

Abstract

Abstract New Guinea has been considered both as a refuge for mesic rainforest-associated lineages that contracted in response to the late Cenozoic aridification of Australia and as a centre of biotic diversification and radiation since the mid-Miocene or earlier. Here, we estimate the diversity and a phylogeny for the Australo-Papuan forest dragons (Sauria: Agamidae; ~20 species) in order to examine the following: (1) whether New Guinea and/or proto-Papuan Islands may have been a biogeographical refuge or a source for diversity in Australia; (2) whether mesic rainforest environments are ancestral to the entire radiation, as may be predicted by the New Guinea refuge hypothesis; and (3) more broadly, how agamid ecological diversity varies across the contrasting environments of Australia and New Guinea. Patterns of lineage distribution and diversity suggest that extinction in Australia, and colonization and radiation on proto-Papuan islands, have both shaped the extant diversity and distribution of forest dragons since the mid-Miocene. The ancestral biome for all Australo-Papuan agamids is ambiguous. Both rainforest and arid-adapted radiations probably started in the early Miocene. However, despite deep-lineage diversity in New Guinea rainforest habitats, overall species and ecological diversity is low when compared with more arid areas, with terrestrial taxa being strikingly absent.

Funder

Binational Science Foundation

Australian Research Council

Australia Pacific Science Foundation

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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