Authors
Oliver Hawlitschek, Lars Hendrich, Marianne Espeland, Emmanuel FA Toussaint, Martin J Genner, Michael Balke
Publication date
2012/12
Journal
BMC Evolutionary Biology
Volume
12
Pages
1-16
Publisher
BioMed Central
Description
Background
The Pleistocene Ice Ages were the most recent geohistorical event of major global impact, but their consequences for most parts of the Southern hemisphere remain poorly known. We investigate a radiation of ten species of Sternopriscus, the most species-rich genus of epigean Australian diving beetles. These species are distinct based on genital morphology but cannot be distinguished readily by mtDNA and nDNA because of genotype sharing caused by incomplete lineage sorting. Their genetic similarity suggests a Pleistocene origin.
Results
We use a dataset of 3858 bp of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA to reconstruct a phylogeny of Sternopriscus using gene and species trees. Diversification analyses support the finding of a recent rapid speciation event with estimated speciation rates of up to 2.40 species per MY, which is considerably …
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