Abstract
The desiccation of the Mediterranean Basin at the end of the Miocene was a milestone in the evolution of the Mediterranean sandfly fauna. This severe environmental change should have notably influenced their paleobiogeography as well as paleoecology and might have triggered the rapid speciation of the ancestors of the extant European sandfly species. The aim of this study was to explore how the Messinian Salinity Crisis could influence the distribution and migration routes of the ancient Mediterranean sandfly species. The unknown ecological requirements of this ancient species were replaced by the distribution-limiting climatic values of three species of extant European phlebotomine sandflies which represent the three ecological types of European sandfly fauna. The former potential occurrence patterns were determined by Climate Envelope Modelling Method. As a climate model for the Messinian Period in the Mediterranean Basin, the modified mid-Pliocene warm period model was used. The thermal surplus of the desiccated seafloor was reconstructed based on the atmospheric lapse rate. It was found that the extraordinary hot climate of the Mediterranean abyssal plain did not allow the direct cross-migration of the ancient sandfly species anywhere between Europe and North Africa neither through Gibraltar nor the Strait of Sicily. While Phlebotomus neglectus and Phlebotomus papatasi could colonize the Adriatic Plain, Phlebotomus ariasi could not. The results indicate that the Messinian played an important role in the speciation rather than migration of the ancestors of present-day Mediterranean sandflies.
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