Abstract

Areas of endemism (AoE) are the main study units in analytical biogeographic methods, and are often defined as an area with two or more endemic species living in them, presenting substantial congruence among their range limits. We explored the distribution of land planarians (Geoplanidae, Platyhelminthes) across the southern region of the Brazilian Atlantic forest (from the state of Rio de Janeiro, to the state of Rio Grande do Sul) utilizing DaSilva's et al. (2015) protocol. We used two methods, Endemicity Analysis (EA), and Geographical Interpolation of Endemism (GIE). We identified nine AoE of terrestrial flatworms in the Southern Atlantic forest. Performance of the methodologies is discussed. These AoE of land planarians can be explained through vicariance events combined with their physiological and ecological own limitations. Interestingly, these AoE are congruent with fine-scale approaches such as that with harvestmen. Most land planarians have revealed to present a very small distributional range evidencing their potential as a good model for fine-scale studies of AoE.

Highlights

  • Historical biogeography has evolved substantially since its beginning three centuries ago [1]

  • This paper aims to contribute to the debate of discovery and test of congruence of areas of endemism in the Atlantic forest

  • We explored the distribution of land planarians across the Atlantic Forest using two methods, Endemicity Analysis (EA), and Geographical Interpolation of Endemism (GIE)

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Summary

Introduction

Historical biogeography has evolved substantially since its beginning three centuries ago [1]. One of its main objectives is to detect areas of endemism (AoE) [2]. Because AoE are the main study units in analytical biogeographic methods [3, 4], they can serve to design biogeographic regionalization schemes [5], to infer historical relationships between them [6], to study organism-climate dynamics [7], and as a criterion to identify areas for conservation [8, 9, 10, 11]. AoE are hypothesized areas that can vary depending on the data use [13, 27,28,29,30]. AoE are often defined as an area with two or more endemic species living in them, presenting

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