Mesozoic origin and 'out-of-India' radiation of ricefishes (Adrianichthyidae)

The Indian subcontinent has an origin geologically different from Eurasia, but many terrestrial animal and plant species on it have congeneric or sister species in other parts of Asia, especially in the Southeast. This faunal and floral similarity between India and Southeast Asia is explained by eit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biology letters (2005) 2021-08, Vol.17 (8), p.20210212-20210212
Hauptverfasser: Yamahira, Kazunori, Ansai, Satoshi, Kakioka, Ryo, Yaguchi, Hajime, Kon, Takeshi, Montenegro, Javier, Kobayashi, Hirozumi, Fujimoto, Shingo, Kimura, Ryosuke, Takehana, Yusuke, Setiamarga, Davin H E, Takami, Yasuoki, Tanaka, Rieko, Maeda, Ken, Tran, Hau D, Koizumi, Noriyuki, Morioka, Shinsuke, Bounsong, Vongvichith, Watanabe, Katsutoshi, Musikasinthorn, Prachya, Tun, Sein, Yun, L K C, Masengi, Kawilarang W A, Anoop, V K, Raghavan, Rajeev, Kitano, Jun
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container_issue 8
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container_title Biology letters (2005)
container_volume 17
creator Yamahira, Kazunori
Ansai, Satoshi
Kakioka, Ryo
Yaguchi, Hajime
Kon, Takeshi
Montenegro, Javier
Kobayashi, Hirozumi
Fujimoto, Shingo
Kimura, Ryosuke
Takehana, Yusuke
Setiamarga, Davin H E
Takami, Yasuoki
Tanaka, Rieko
Maeda, Ken
Tran, Hau D
Koizumi, Noriyuki
Morioka, Shinsuke
Bounsong, Vongvichith
Watanabe, Katsutoshi
Musikasinthorn, Prachya
Tun, Sein
Yun, L K C
Masengi, Kawilarang W A
Anoop, V K
Raghavan, Rajeev
Kitano, Jun
description The Indian subcontinent has an origin geologically different from Eurasia, but many terrestrial animal and plant species on it have congeneric or sister species in other parts of Asia, especially in the Southeast. This faunal and floral similarity between India and Southeast Asia is explained by either of the two biogeographic scenarios, 'into-India' or 'out-of-India'. Phylogenies based on complete mitochondrial genomes and five nuclear genes were undertaken for ricefishes (Adrianichthyidae) to examine which of these two biogeographic scenarios fits better. We found that , the only adrianichthyid distributed in and endemic to the Western Ghats, a mountain range running parallel to the western coast of the Indian subcontinent, is sister to all other adrianichthyids from eastern India and Southeast-East Asia. Divergence time estimates and ancestral area reconstructions reveal that this western Indian species diverged in the late Mesozoic during the northward drift of the Indian subcontinent. These findings indicate that adrianichthyids dispersed eastward 'out-of-India' after the collision of the Indian subcontinent with Eurasia, and subsequently diversified in Southeast-East Asia. A review of geographic distributions of 'out-of-India' taxa reveals that they may have largely fuelled or modified the biodiversity of Eurasia.
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subjects Animals
Asia, Southeastern
Biodiversity
Evolutionary Biology
India
Oryzias
Phylogeny
title Mesozoic origin and 'out-of-India' radiation of ricefishes (Adrianichthyidae)
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