1. From mainland to islands: colonization history in the tree frog Kurixalus (Anura: Rhacophoridae).
- Author
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Yu, Guo-Hua, Du, Li-Na, Wang, Ji-Shan, Rao, Ding-Qi, Wu, Zheng-Jun, and Yang, Jun-Xing
- Subjects
HYLIDAE ,RHACOPHORIDAE ,COLONIZATION ,TREE breeding ,CURRENT distribution ,ANURA - Abstract
The origin and colonization history of Kurixalus , a genus of small arboreal tree frogs breeding exclusively in shallow swamps, is under disputed. On the basis of comprehensive sampling program, the evolutionary history of Kurixalus is investigated based on 3 mitochondrial genes. Our results indicate that the genus Kurixalus originated in the Asian mainland and subsequently arrived at its current distribution in Borneo, Taiwan, Ryukyu, and Hainan islands by a series of dispersal events. Moreover, the colonization of Taiwan from mainland Asia has occurred 2 times. The initial colonization of Taiwan occurred at 3.46–8.68 Mya (95% highest posterior density), which rejects the hypothesis that Kurixalus probably originated from Taiwan during the early Oligocene and favors the model of Neogene-origin rather than the model of Quaternary-origin for Taiwanese Kurixalus. Kurixalus eiffingeri has dispersed from Taiwan to the Ryukyus once or 2 times pending more data. Both transoceanic dispersal and landbridge dispersal have played a role in the colonization process; the former resulted in the colonization of Taiwan and the Ryukyus and the latter led to the colonization of Borneo and Hainan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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