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Molecular phylogeny of I ndo‐ P acific carpenter ants ( H ymenoptera: F ormicidae, C amponotus ) reveals waves of dispersal and colonization from diverse source areas
Author(s) -
Clouse Ronald M.,
Janda Milan,
Blanchard Benjamin,
Sharma Prashant,
Hoffmann Benjamin D.,
Andersen Alan N.,
CzekanskiMoir Jesse E.,
Krushelnycky Paul,
Rabeling Christian,
Wilson Edward O.,
Economo Evan P.,
Sarnat Eli M.,
General David M.,
Alpert Gary D.,
Wheeler Ward C.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
cladistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.323
H-Index - 92
eISSN - 1096-0031
pISSN - 0748-3007
DOI - 10.1111/cla.12099
Subject(s) - biological dispersal , biology , phylogenetic tree , archipelago , ecology , taxon , zoology , lineage (genetic) , fauna , phylogenetics , evolutionary biology , population , genetics , gene , demography , sociology
Ants that resemble Camponotus maculatus (Fabricius, 1782) present an opportunity to test the hypothesis that the origin of the Pacific island fauna was primarily New Guinea, the Philippines, and the Indo‐Malay archipelago (collectively known as Malesia). We sequenced two mitochondrial and four nuclear markers from 146 specimens from Pacific islands, Australia, and Malesia. We also added 211 specimens representing a larger worldwide sample and performed a series of phylogenetic analyses and ancestral area reconstructions. Results indicate that the Pacific members of this group comprise several robust clades that have distinctly different biogeographical histories, and they suggest an important role for Australia as a source of Pacific colonizations. Malesian areas were recovered mostly in derived positions, and one lineage appears to be Neotropical. Phylogenetic hypotheses indicate that the orange, pan‐Pacific form commonly identified as C. chloroticus Emery 1897 actually consists of two distantly related lineages. Also, the lineage on Hawaiʻi, which has been called C. variegatus (Smith, 1858), appears to be closely related to C. tortuganus Emery, 1895 in Florida and other lineages in the New World. In Micronesia and Polynesia the C. chloroticus ‐like species support predictions of the taxon‐cycle hypothesis and could be candidates for human‐mediated dispersal.

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