Testing Synchrony in Historical Biogeography: The Case of New World Primates and Hystricognathi Rodents
The abrupt appearance of primates and hystricognath rodents in early Oligocene deposits of South America has puzzled mastozoologists for decades. Based on the geoclimatic changes that occurred during the Eocene/Oligocene transition period that may have favoured their dispersal, researchers have prop...
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doaj-aafe82bac4af49f7b861dee6027ff3f82020-11-25T02:48:18ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Bioinformatics1176-93432012-01-01810.4137/EBO.S9008Testing Synchrony in Historical Biogeography: The Case of New World Primates and Hystricognathi RodentsLeticia Loss-Oliveira0Barbara O. Aguiar1Carlos G. Schrago2Authors contributed equally to this work.Authors contributed equally to this work.Department of Genetics, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.The abrupt appearance of primates and hystricognath rodents in early Oligocene deposits of South America has puzzled mastozoologists for decades. Based on the geoclimatic changes that occurred during the Eocene/Oligocene transition period that may have favoured their dispersal, researchers have proposed the hypothesis that these groups arrived in synchrony. Nevertheless, the hypothesis of synchronous origins of platyrrhine and caviomorph in South America has not been explicitly evaluated. Our aim in this work was to apply a formal test for synchronous divergence times to the Platyrrhini and Caviomorpha splits. We have examined a previous work on platyrrhine and hystricognath origins, applied the test to a case where synchrony is known to occur and conducted simulations to show that it is possible to formally test the age of synchronous nodes. We show that the absolute ages of Platyrrhini/Catarrhini and Caviomorpha/Phiomorpha splits depend on data partitioning and that the test applied consistently detected synchronous events when they were known to have happened. The hypothesis that the arrival of primates and hystricognaths to the New World consisted of a unique event cannot be rejected.https://doi.org/10.4137/EBO.S9008 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Leticia Loss-Oliveira Barbara O. Aguiar Carlos G. Schrago |
spellingShingle |
Leticia Loss-Oliveira Barbara O. Aguiar Carlos G. Schrago Testing Synchrony in Historical Biogeography: The Case of New World Primates and Hystricognathi Rodents Evolutionary Bioinformatics |
author_facet |
Leticia Loss-Oliveira Barbara O. Aguiar Carlos G. Schrago |
author_sort |
Leticia Loss-Oliveira |
title |
Testing Synchrony in Historical Biogeography: The Case of New World Primates and Hystricognathi Rodents |
title_short |
Testing Synchrony in Historical Biogeography: The Case of New World Primates and Hystricognathi Rodents |
title_full |
Testing Synchrony in Historical Biogeography: The Case of New World Primates and Hystricognathi Rodents |
title_fullStr |
Testing Synchrony in Historical Biogeography: The Case of New World Primates and Hystricognathi Rodents |
title_full_unstemmed |
Testing Synchrony in Historical Biogeography: The Case of New World Primates and Hystricognathi Rodents |
title_sort |
testing synchrony in historical biogeography: the case of new world primates and hystricognathi rodents |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
Evolutionary Bioinformatics |
issn |
1176-9343 |
publishDate |
2012-01-01 |
description |
The abrupt appearance of primates and hystricognath rodents in early Oligocene deposits of South America has puzzled mastozoologists for decades. Based on the geoclimatic changes that occurred during the Eocene/Oligocene transition period that may have favoured their dispersal, researchers have proposed the hypothesis that these groups arrived in synchrony. Nevertheless, the hypothesis of synchronous origins of platyrrhine and caviomorph in South America has not been explicitly evaluated. Our aim in this work was to apply a formal test for synchronous divergence times to the Platyrrhini and Caviomorpha splits. We have examined a previous work on platyrrhine and hystricognath origins, applied the test to a case where synchrony is known to occur and conducted simulations to show that it is possible to formally test the age of synchronous nodes. We show that the absolute ages of Platyrrhini/Catarrhini and Caviomorpha/Phiomorpha splits depend on data partitioning and that the test applied consistently detected synchronous events when they were known to have happened. The hypothesis that the arrival of primates and hystricognaths to the New World consisted of a unique event cannot be rejected. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.4137/EBO.S9008 |
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