Authors
Ben J Evans, Rafe M Brown, Jimmy A McGuire, Jatna Supriatna, Noviar Andayani, Arvin Diesmos, Djoko Iskandar, Don J Melnick, David C Cannatella
Publication date
2003/12/1
Journal
Systematic biology
Volume
52
Issue
6
Pages
794-819
Publisher
Society of Systematic Zoology
Description
The interface of the Asian and Australian faunal zones is defined by a network of deep ocean trenches that separate intervening islands of the Philippines and Wallacea (Sulawesi, the Lesser Sundas, and the Moluccas). Studies of this region by Wallace marked the genesis of the field of biogeography, yet few workers have used molecular methods to investigate the biogeography of taxa whose distribution spans this interface. Some taxa, such as the fanged frogs of the ranid genus Limnonectes, have distributions on either side of the zoogeographical lines of Wallace and Huxley, offering an opportunity to ask how frequently these purported barriers were crossed and by what paths. To examine diversification of Limnonectes in Southeast Asia, the Philippines, and Wallacea, we estimated a phylogeny from mitochondrial DNA sequences obtained from a robust geographic sample. Our analyses suggest that these …
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