Abstract

Dispersals have been shown to be critical to the evolution of the long isolated but megadiverse flora of Madagascar and the surrounding islands of the western Indian Ocean, but we are just beginning to understand the directionality of these dispersals. With more than half of its species occurring in the western Indian Ocean region (WIOR), the paleotropical subfamily Dombeyoideae provides a particularly useful case study through which to better understand the biogeography of the WIOR, and yet its biogeography is poorly understood. Here we sampled six molecular markers from all 20 genera in the Dombeyoideae to reconstruct the most complete phylogeny to date for the subfamily. From this, divergence times, calibrated with three fossils (two dombeyoid, one malvoid), and ancestral range estimations were hypothesized. Biogeographic stochastic mapping (BSM) analyses on the maximum clade credibility tree were completed and compared to BSM analyses on 1,000 trees randomly sampled from the posterior distribution of trees resulting from the dating analysis. We found the Dombeyoideae crown node diverged ca. 53 million years ago out of a broad ancestral range involving all three major areas of its distribution: Madagascar, Africa, and Asia. The majority of diversification and dispersals in the subfamily occurred within the last ca. 10 million years, mostly from the Pliocene onwards. There were roughly five dispersals from Madagascar to Africa (and only one in reverse), at least six from Madagascar to surrounding islands of the WIOR (Mascarenes and Comoros), and one dispersal from Madagascar to Asia (and ca. 1 in reverse). Other long-distance dispersals included one from Africa to St. Helena and one from Africa to Australasia, both from within the most widespread clade, the Cheirolaena & allies clade, and one dispersal from Asia to Africa. Critically, the Dombeyoideae provide strong evidence for considering the island of Madagascar as a source for the colonization of continents, as well as the surrounding islands of the WIOR. Furthermore, narrow sympatry was a key process in the evolution of the subfamily, particularly in Madagascar and the Mascarenes.

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