Abstract

Understanding the factors that shape current species diversity is a fundamental aim of ecology and evolutionary biology. The Australian Wet Tropics (AWT) are a system in which much is known about how the rainforests and the rainforest-dependent organisms reacted to late Pleistocene climate changes, but less is known about how events deeper in time shaped speciation and extinction in this highly endemic biota. We estimate the phylogeny of a species-rich endemic genus of earthworms (Terrisswalkerius) from the region. Using DEC and DIVA historical biogeography methods we find a strong signal of vicariance among known biogeographical sub-regions across the whole phylogeny, congruent with the phylogeography of less diverse vertebrate groups. Absolute dating estimates, in conjunction with relative ages of major biogeographic disjunctions across Australia, indicate that diversification in Terrisswalkerius dates back before the mid-Miocene shift towards aridification, into the Paleogene era of isolation of mesothermal Gondwanan Australia. For the Queensland endemic Terrisswalkerius earthworms, the AWT have acted as both a museum of biological diversity and as the setting for continuing geographically structured diversification. These results suggest that past events affecting organismal diversification can be concordant across phylogeographic to phylogenetic levels and emphasize the value of multi-scale analysis, from intra- to interspecies, for understanding the broad-scale processes that have shaped geographic diversity.

Highlights

  • Geologic and climatic oscillation events are likely to have profound effects on both rates of speciation and current distributions of taxa

  • In this paper we explore whether climatedriven vicariance, as measured by biogeographic structuring of sister clades within the phylogeny, has shaped long-term speciation in a system with a well-characterized history of late Quaternary contraction and refugia: The rainforests of the Australian Wet Tropics

  • Considering the biogeographic analyses and the known current distributions for species, we find what may have been expansions back across the Black Mountain Corridor (BMC) and this is probably the case for T. canaliculatus, T. erici, T. grandis, and T. terraereginae

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Summary

Introduction

Geologic and climatic oscillation events are likely to have profound effects on both rates of speciation and current distributions of taxa. PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0136943 September 14, 2015

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