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India-Madagascar vicariance explains cascade beetle biogeography

Publication at Faculty of Science |
2016

Abstract

India and Madagascar drifted apart more than 80Mya, yet few taxonomic groups currently found in these regions bear any signature of this split. When drifting in isolation, extensive volcanic activity covered almost half of India in lava flows, likely triggering widespread extinction on the island.

Consequently, most of India's rich extant flora and fauna are considered to be the result of recent Cenozoic dispersal, and no lineages are conclusively a result of ancient vicariance. Many of Madagascar's lineages also stem from either Cenozoic diversification or dispersal events, with the latter being a result of the close proximity of the island with mainland Africa.

In the present study, we focus on two remarkable lineages of cascade beetles in the genera Scoliopsis and Tritonus (Coleoptera, Hydrophilidae), respectively, dwelling in the mountains of south India and Sri Lanka, as well as in Madagascar. Based on a molecular phylogeny of the family Hydrophilidae dated with eight fossils, we show that these two lineages are sister taxa, and diverged when Madagascar and Greater India (India, Sri Lanka, Seychelles) separated, suggesting a pattern of Gondwanean vicariance.

The results of the present study show that, despite geological upheaval, the present-day fauna of India still retains traces of its Gondwanan past.