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A temporally dynamic approach for cladistic biogeography and the processes underlying the biogeographic patterns of North American deserts
Authors:Niza Gámez  Silvio S. Nihei  Enrique Scheinvar  Juan J. Morrone
Affiliation:1. Museo de Zoología ‘Alfonso L. Herrera’, Departamento de Biología Evolutiva, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Mexico City, Mexico;2. Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade de S?o Paulo, Cidade Universitária, S?o Paulo, SP, Brazil;3. Departamento de Ecología Evolutiva, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Mexico City, Mexico
Abstract:We implemented a temporally dynamic approach to the cladistic biogeographic analysis of 13 areas of North American deserts and several plant and animal taxa. We undertook a parsimony analysis of paralogy‐free subtrees based on 43 phylogenetic hypotheses of arthropod, vertebrate and plant taxa, assigning their nodes to three different time slices based on their estimated minimum ages: Early‐Mid‐Miocene (23?7 Ma), Late Miocene/Pliocene (6.9?2.5 Ma) and Pleistocene (2.4?0.011 Ma). The analyses resulted in three general area cladograms, one for each time slice, showing different area relationships. They allowed us to detect influences of different geological and palaeoclimatological events of the Early‐Mid‐Miocene, Late Miocene/Pliocene and Pleistocene that might have affected the diversification of the desert biota. Several diversification events in the deserts of North America might have been driven by Neogene uplift, marine incursion and the opening of the California Gulf during the Miocene–Pliocene, whereas climatic fluctuations had the highest impact during the Pleistocene.
Keywords:Area relationships  deserts  evolutionary biogeography  general area cladograms  Mexico
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