Biogeographic influences on the evolution and historical dispersal of the Australo‐Pacific Dacini fruit flies (Tephritidae: Dacinae)

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2023-09-14 DOI:10.1111/zsc.12631
Melissa L. Starkie, Stephen L. Cameron, Matt N. Krosch, Andrew D. Sweet, Anthony R. Clarke
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Abstract

Abstract Fruit flies (Tephritidae: Dacini) are a frugivorous insect group that exhibit high endemic diversity in the rainforests of Australia and the western Pacific. In this region, biogeography has been influenced by tectonic plate movements and cycles of isolation and re‐connection of landmasses and rainforest habitats during glacial periods. However, how such factors have influenced the speciation and historical dispersal of the regional Dacini is largely unknown. To address this, we use a dated phylogeny to reconstruct the biogeographical history of the tribe. We found the Dacini radiated eastward into the Pacific islands largely from sources in New Guinea. We also found evidence for historical dispersal from both Australia and New Guinea into New Caledonia, a pathway unique to this island compared with neighbouring islands. There was also evidence for multiple, bidirectional dispersal events between Papua New Guinea and Australia, likely facilitated by the cyclically exposed Torres Strait land bridge. Cape York in far northern Australia was likely the only entry point for species dispersing into Australia; there was no evidence for entry of flies into Australia directly from West Papua or Wallacea. Several lineages radiated after entering Australia, such as members of the Bactrocera dorsalis species group. Within Australia, speciation was not associated with the biogeographic barriers known to have impacted other rainforest fauna in eastern Australia. Overall, we demonstrate that isolation between islands and large landmasses is important in the evolution of the Australo‐Pacific Dacini, but the reason for their extensive radiation within Australia and Papua New Guinea remains unclear.
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澳太平洋达西蝇(绢蝇科:达西蝇科)进化和历史传播的生物地理影响
摘要:果蝇是一种在澳大利亚和西太平洋热带雨林中表现出高度地方性多样性的食果昆虫类群。在这一地区,生物地理受到冰川期构造板块运动和陆地与雨林栖息地分离与重新连接循环的影响。然而,这些因素如何影响该地区达契尼的物种形成和历史分布在很大程度上是未知的。为了解决这个问题,我们使用一个日期系统发育来重建部落的生物地理历史。我们发现达契尼人主要从新几内亚向东辐射到太平洋岛屿。我们还发现了从澳大利亚和新几内亚向新喀里多尼亚迁移的历史证据,与邻近岛屿相比,新喀里多尼亚是一条独特的路径。还有证据表明,巴布亚新几内亚和澳大利亚之间发生了多次双向扩散事件,可能是由周期性暴露的托雷斯海峡大陆桥促成的。远在澳大利亚北部的约克角可能是物种分散到澳大利亚的唯一入口点;没有证据表明有苍蝇直接从西巴布亚或瓦拉科亚进入澳大利亚。一些谱系在进入澳大利亚后扩散开来,例如背小实蝇物种群的成员。在澳大利亚,物种形成与已知的影响澳大利亚东部其他雨林动物的生物地理障碍无关。总的来说,我们证明了岛屿和大陆地之间的隔离在澳太平洋达契尼的进化中是重要的,但它们在澳大利亚和巴布亚新几内亚广泛辐射的原因尚不清楚。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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