Authors
Krystal A Tolley, Colin R Tilbury, G John Measey, Michele Menegon, William R Branch, Conrad A Matthee
Publication date
2011/9
Journal
Journal of Biogeography
Volume
38
Issue
9
Pages
1748-1760
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Aim  East Africa is one of the most biologically diverse regions, especially in terms of endemism and species richness. Hypotheses put forward to explain this high diversity invoke a role for forest refugia through: (1) accumulation of new species due to radiation within refugial habitats, or (2) retention of older palaeoendemic species in stable refugia. We tested these alternative hypotheses using data for a diverse genus of East African forest chameleons, Kinyongia.
Location  East Africa.
Methods  We constructed a dated phylogeny for Kinyongia using one nuclear and two mitochondrial markers. We identified areas of high phylogenetic diversity (PD) and evolutionary diversity (ED), and mapped ancestral areas to ascertain whether lineage diversification could best be explained by vicariance or dispersal.
Results  Vicariance best explains the present biogeographic patterns, with divergence between three major …
Total citations
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