DAVIS, CHARLES C.1*, CHARLES D. BELL2, SARAH MATHEWS3, and MICHAEL J. DONOGHUE2. 1Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University Herbaria, 2 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA; 2Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, P.O. Box 208106, New Haven, CT 06520, USA; 3Division of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri-Columbia, 226 Tucker Hall, Columbia, MO 65211, USA. - Laurasian migration explains Gondwanan disjunctions: evidence from Malpighiaceae.
Explanations for biogeographic disjunctions involving South America
and Africa typically invoke vicariance of western Gondwanan biotas or
long distance dispersal. These hypotheses are problematical because
many groups originated and diversified well after the last known
connection between Africa and South America (~105 million years ago),
and it is unlikely that “sweepstakes” dispersal accounts for many of
these disjunctions. Phylogenetic analyses of the angiosperm clade
Malpighiaceae, combined with fossil evidence and molecular
divergence-time estimates, suggest an alternative hypothesis to
account for such distributions. We propose that Malpighiaceae
originated in northern South America, and that members of several
clades repeatedly migrated into North America and subsequently moved
via North Atlantic land connections into the Old World during episodes
starting in the Eocene, when climates supported tropical forests. This
Laurasian migration route may explain many other extant lineages that
exhibit western Gondwanan distributions.
Key words: biogeographic disjunctions, dispersal, Malpighiaceae