Data from: Out of the Orient: Post-Tethyan transoceanic and trans-Arabian routes fostered the spread of Baorini skippers in the Afrotropics
The origin of taxa presenting a disjunct distribution between Africa and Asia has puzzled biogeographers for more than a century. This biogeographic pattern has been hypothesized to be the result of transoceanic long‐distance dispersal, Oligocene dispersal through forested corridors, Miocene dispers...
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Zusammenfassung: | The origin of taxa presenting a disjunct distribution between Africa and
Asia has puzzled biogeographers for more than a century. This
biogeographic pattern has been hypothesized to be the result of
transoceanic long‐distance dispersal, Oligocene dispersal through forested
corridors, Miocene dispersal through the Arabian Peninsula or passive
dispersal on the rifting Indian plate. However, it has often been
difficult to pinpoint the mechanisms at play. We investigate biotic
exchange between the Afrotropics and the Oriental region during the
Cenozoic, a period in which geological changes altered landmass
connectivity. We use Baorini skippers (Lepidoptera, Hesperiidae) as a
model, a widespread clade of butterflies in the Old World tropics with a
disjunct distribution between the Afrotropics and the Oriental region. We
use anchored phylogenomics to infer a robust evolutionary tree for Baorini
skippers and estimate divergence times and ancestral ranges to test
biogeographic hypotheses. Our phylogenomic tree recovers strongly
supported relationships for Baorini skippers and clarifies the systematics
of the tribe. Dating analyses suggest that these butterflies originated in
the Oriental region, Greater Sunda Islands, and the Philippines in the
early Miocene c. 23 Ma. Baorini skippers dispersed from the Oriental
region towards Africa at least five times in the past 20 Ma. These
butterflies colonized the Afrotropics primarily through trans‐Arabian
geodispersal after the closure of the Tethyan seaway in the mid‐Miocene.
Range expansion from the Oriental region towards the African continent
probably occurred via the Gomphotherium land bridge through the Arabian
Peninsula. Alternative scenarios invoking long‐distance dispersal and
vicariance are not supported. The Miocene climate change and biome shift
from forested areas to grasslands possibly facilitated geodispersal in
this clade of butterflies. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.6qp7p13 |