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Macroevolutionary Dynamics and Historical Biogeography of Primate Diversification Inferred from a Species Supermatrix

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, November 2012
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Title
Macroevolutionary Dynamics and Historical Biogeography of Primate Diversification Inferred from a Species Supermatrix
Published in
PLOS ONE, November 2012
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0049521
Pubmed ID
Authors

Mark S. Springer, Robert W. Meredith, John Gatesy, Christopher A. Emerling, Jong Park, Daniel L. Rabosky, Tanja Stadler, Cynthia Steiner, Oliver A. Ryder, Jan E. Janečka, Colleen A. Fisher, William J. Murphy

Abstract

Phylogenetic relationships, divergence times, and patterns of biogeographic descent among primate species are both complex and contentious. Here, we generate a robust molecular phylogeny for 70 primate genera and 367 primate species based on a concatenation of 69 nuclear gene segments and ten mitochondrial gene sequences, most of which were extracted from GenBank. Relaxed clock analyses of divergence times with 14 fossil-calibrated nodes suggest that living Primates last shared a common ancestor 71-63 Ma, and that divergences within both Strepsirrhini and Haplorhini are entirely post-Cretaceous. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction of non-avian dinosaurs played an important role in the diversification of placental mammals. Previous queries into primate historical biogeography have suggested Africa, Asia, Europe, or North America as the ancestral area of crown primates, but were based on methods that were coopted from phylogeny reconstruction. By contrast, we analyzed our molecular phylogeny with two methods that were developed explicitly for ancestral area reconstruction, and find support for the hypothesis that the most recent common ancestor of living Primates resided in Asia. Analyses of primate macroevolutionary dynamics provide support for a diversification rate increase in the late Miocene, possibly in response to elevated global mean temperatures, and are consistent with the fossil record. By contrast, diversification analyses failed to detect evidence for rate-shift changes near the Eocene-Oligocene boundary even though the fossil record provides clear evidence for a major turnover event ("Grande Coupure") at this time. Our results highlight the power and limitations of inferring diversification dynamics from molecular phylogenies, as well as the sensitivity of diversification analyses to different species concepts.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Brazil 6 1%
United States 6 1%
United Kingdom 4 <1%
Germany 2 <1%
Chile 1 <1%
Portugal 1 <1%
Czechia 1 <1%
India 1 <1%
France 1 <1%
Other 4 <1%
Unknown 390 94%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 86 21%
Student > Master 66 16%
Researcher 59 14%
Student > Bachelor 50 12%
Student > Doctoral Student 27 6%
Other 70 17%
Unknown 59 14%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 197 47%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 55 13%
Earth and Planetary Sciences 26 6%
Environmental Science 24 6%
Social Sciences 16 4%
Other 26 6%
Unknown 73 18%