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Island-to-island vicariance, founder-event and within-area speciation : the biogeographal history of the Antillattus clade (Salticidae: Euophryini)
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- Investigación ambiental [1462]
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Show full item recordAbstract: | The Caribbean Archipelago is a biodiversity hotspot that plays a key role in developing our understanding of how dispersal ability affects species formation. In island systems, species with intermediate dispersal abilities tend to exhibit greater diversity, as may be the case for many of the salticid lineages of the insular Caribbean. Here, we use molecular phylogenetic analyses to infer patterns of relationships and biogeographic history of the Caribbean endemic Antillattus clade (Antillattus, Truncattus, and Petemethis). We test if the timing of origin of the Antillatus clade in the Greater Antilles is congruent with GAARlandia and infer patterns of diversification within the Antillattus clade among Cuba, Hispaniola, and Puerto Rico. |
Author(s): | Cala-Riquelme, Franklyn
Wiencek, Patrick Florez-Daza, Eduardo Binford, Greta J. Agnarsson, Ingi |
Date: | 2022 |
Published: | Diversity, 14(3), 224 |
Citation: | Cala-Riquelme, F., Wiencek, P., Florez-Daza, E., Binford, G. J., & Agnarsson, I. (2022). Island-to-island vicariance, founder-event and within-area speciation, the biogeographal history of the Antillattus clade (Salticidae: Euophryini). Diversity, 14(3), 224. Recuperado de: |
URI: | https://bvearmb.do/handle/123456789/3944
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