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Historical biogeography of the hyperdiverse hidden snout weevils (Coleoptera,Curculionidae, Cryptorhynchinae)
Authors:Harald Letsch  Michael Balke  Emmanuel FA Toussaint  Alexander Riedel
Institution:1. Museum of Natural History Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, Germany

Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;2. SNSB-Zoological State Collection (ZSM), Munich, Germany;3. Natural History Museum of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland;4. Museum of Natural History Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, Germany

Abstract:The first dated phylogeny of the weevil subfamily Cryptorhynchinae is presented within a framework of Curculionoidea. The inferred pattern and timing of weevil family relationships are generally congruent with previous studies, but our data are the first to suggest a highly supported sister-group relationship between Attelabidae and Belidae. Our biogeographical inferences suggest that Cryptorhynchinae s.s. originated in the Late Cretaceous (c. 86 Ma) in South America. Within the ‘Acalles group’ and the ‘Cryptorhynchus group’, several independent dispersal events to the Western Palaearctic via the Nearctic occurred in the Late Cretaceous and Early Paleogene. A second southern route via Antarctica may have facilitated the colonization of Australia in the Late Cretaceous (c. 82 Ma), where a diverse Indo-Australian clade probably emerged c. 73 Ma. In the Early Eocene (c. 50–55 Ma), several clades independently dispersed from Australia to proto-New Guinea, i.e. the tribe Arachnopodini s.l., the ‘Rhynchodes group’ and the genus Trigonopterus. New Zealand was first colonized in the Late Palaeocene (c. 60 Ma). Divergence time estimations and biogeographical reconstructions indicate that the colonization of New Guinea is older than expected from current geological reconstructions of the region.
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