Abstract

Pleurodires or side-necked turtles are today restricted to freshwater environments of South America, Africa–Madagascar and Australia, but in the past they were distributed much more broadly, being found also on Eurasia, India and North America, and marine environments. Two hypotheses were proposed to explain this distribution; in the first, vicariance would have shaped the current geographical distribution and, in the second, extinctions constrained a previously widespread distribution. Here, we aim to reconstruct pleurodiran biogeographic history and diversification patterns based on a new phylogenetic hypothesis recovered from the analysis of the largest morphological dataset yet compiled for the lineage, testing which biogeographical process prevailed during its evolutionary history. The resulting topology generally agrees with previous hypotheses of the group and shows that most diversification shifts were related to the exploration of new niches, e.g. littoral or marine radiations. In addition, as other turtles, pleurodires do not seem to have been much affected by either the Cretaceous–Palaeogene or the Eocene–Oligocene mass extinctions. The biogeographic analyses highlight the predominance of both anagenetic and cladogenetic dispersal events and support the importance of transoceanic dispersals as a more common driver of area changes than previously thought, agreeing with previous studies with other non-turtle lineages.

Highlights

  • The turtle crown group Testudines is composed of two lineages with extant taxa [1]: cryptodires or hidden-necked turtles, and pleurodires or side-necked turtles

  • PeirLoapPpemprCiaycraseCenmmneiPteynreozPsremzedPomacyPjoPladoosiyorcioodnsveadncieodritloearmnacomicvendcyinmieelsnseenmeniwmvtssmaiaoiseitsygiasrseulyuixultnpehnwairafoniiyklcsiaieasnpahala Podocnemis bassleri Podocnemis sextuberculata of characters and common synapomorphies, as well as phylogenetic definitions for the clades and a more detailed description of the results are provided in the electronic supplementary material

  • The Podocnemidoidae have been more widespread during some periods (e.g. Paleocene to Miocene), but our results show that, as bothremydids, they were mainly restricted to a few areas from which they dispersed to others

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Summary

Introduction

The turtle crown group Testudines is composed of two lineages with extant taxa [1]: cryptodires or hidden-necked turtles, and pleurodires or side-necked turtles. Pleurodires today represent a small fraction of the diversity of Testudines (93 of 356 species; [9]) and are restricted to freshwater environments ( some chelids seem to tolerate higher levels of salinity; [10,11]) of Africa, Australia, Madagascar and South America [12]. Their fossil record, reveals a much broader distribution, including Eurasia, India and North America Podocnemididae and Bothremydidae are by far the most abundant pleurodires in the fossil record, and a proposed peak in pleurodire diversity during the Cretaceous and Paleocene seems to be related to the diversification of those two groups [12]

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