3 Works

Data from: Dispersal out of Wallacea spurs diversification of Pteropus flying foxes, the world’s largest bats (Mammalia: Chiroptera)

Susan M. Tsang, Sigit Wiantoro, Maria Josefa Veluz, Norimasa Sugita, Y-Lan Nguyen, Nancy B. Simmons & David J. Lohman
Aim: Islands provide opportunities for isolation and speciation. Many landmasses in the Indo-Australian Archipelago (IAA) are oceanic islands, and founder-event speciation is expected to be the predominant form of speciation of volant taxa on these islands. We studied the biogeographic history of flying foxes, a group with many endemic species and a predilection for islands, to test this hypothesis and infer the biogeographic origin of the group. Location: Australasia, Indo-Australian Archipelago, Madagascar, Pacific Islands Taxon:...

Data from: An update and reassessment of fern and lycophyte diversity data in the Japanese Archipelago

Atsushi Ebihara & Joel H. Nitta
The fern and lycophyte flora of Japan comprising 721 native taxa (including subspecies and varieties) plus 371 interspecific hybrids was reassessed using a nearly comprehensively sampled distribution map at 10 km resolution vouchered by 216,687 specimens, up-to-date cytotaxonomic information covering 74% of the taxa, and an rbcL sequence dataset covering 97.9% of the taxa. Spatial distribution of species richness and phylogenetic diversity was visualized. Apomixis was observed in 11.0% of the native taxa whose reproductive...

Data from: Divergence before and after the isolation of islands: phylogeography of the Bradybaena land snails on the Ryukyu Islands of Japan

Takahiro Hirano, Yuichi Kameda, Takumi Saito & Satoshi Chiba
Aim: Vicariance events have been proposed as a major source of lineage divergence on continental islands, whereas dispersal events followed by isolation have been proposed as the major cause on oceanic islands. However, organisms on continental islands may include taxa with characteristics similar to those on oceanic islands. Lineage divergence unassociated with the geological events that separated islands may also have occurred. This study addresses these possibilities through morphological and molecular phylogeographic analyses of land...

Registration Year

  • 2019
    3

Resource Types

  • Dataset
    3

Affiliations

  • National Museum of Nature and Science
    3
  • City College of New York
    1
  • Tohoku University
    1
  • Smithsonian Institution
    1
  • Indonesian Institute of Sciences
    1
  • University of Idaho
    1
  • American Museum of Natural History
    1
  • National Museum of Natural History
    1