Recent Synchronous Radiation of a Living Fossil

被引:302
作者
Nagalingum, N. S. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Marshall, C. R. [2 ]
Quental, T. B. [2 ,4 ]
Rai, H. S. [1 ,5 ]
Little, D. P. [6 ]
Mathews, S. [1 ]
机构
[1] Arnold Arboretum Harvard Univ, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
[2] Univ Calif Berkeley, Univ Calif Museum Paleontol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
[3] Royal Bot Garden Sydney, Natl Herbarium New S Wales, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia
[4] Univ Sao Paulo, Dept Ecol, Sao Paulo, Brazil
[5] Utah State Univ, Dept Wildland Resources, Logan, UT 84322 USA
[6] New York Bot Garden, Cullman Program Mol Systemat, Bronx, NY 10458 USA
关键词
CERATOZAMIA ZAMIACEAE; EVOLUTION; CYCADS; POLLINATION; DIVERGENCE; PHYLOGENY; NUCLEAR; DNA;
D O I
10.1126/science.1209926
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Modern survivors of previously more diverse lineages are regarded as living fossils, particularly when characterized by morphological stasis. Cycads are often cited as a classic example, reaching their greatest diversity during the Jurassic-Cretaceous (199.6 to 65.5 million years ago) then dwindling to their present diversity of similar to 300 species as flowering plants rose to dominance. Using fossil-calibrated molecular phylogenies, we show that cycads underwent a near synchronous global rediversification beginning in the late Miocene, followed by a slowdown toward the Recent. Although the cycad lineage is ancient, our timetrees indicate that living cycad species are not much older than similar to 12 million years. These data reject the hypothesized role of dinosaurs in generating extant diversity and the designation of today's cycad species as living fossils.
引用
收藏
页码:796 / 799
页数:4
相关论文
共 41 条
  • [1] [Anonymous], 2010, IUCN Red List of Threatened Species
  • [2] Contemporaneous and recent radiations of the world's major succulent plant lineages
    Arakaki, Monica
    Christin, Pascal-Antoine
    Nyffeler, Reto
    Lendel, Anita
    Eggli, Urs
    Ogburn, R. Matthew
    Spriggs, Elizabeth
    Moore, Michael J.
    Edwards, Erika J.
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2011, 108 (20) : 8379 - 8384
  • [3] Has the Earth's sixth mass extinction already arrived?
    Barnosky, Anthony D.
    Matzke, Nicholas
    Tomiya, Susumu
    Wogan, Guinevere O. U.
    Swartz, Brian
    Quental, Tiago B.
    Marshall, Charles
    McGuire, Jenny L.
    Lindsey, Emily L.
    Maguire, Kaitlin C.
    Mersey, Ben
    Ferrer, Elizabeth A.
    [J]. NATURE, 2011, 471 (7336) : 51 - 57
  • [4] Testing co-evolutionary hypotheses over geological timescales: interactions between Mesozoic non-avian dinosaurs and cycads
    Butler, Richard J.
    Barrett, Paul M.
    Kenrick, Paul
    Penn, Malcolm G.
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 2009, 84 (01) : 73 - 89
  • [5] A phylogeny of cycads (Cycadales) inferred from chloroplast matK gene, trnK intron, and nuclear rDNA ITS region
    Chaw, SM
    Walters, TW
    Chang, CC
    Hu, SH
    Chen, SH
    [J]. MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION, 2005, 37 (01) : 214 - 234
  • [6] When North and South don't mix: genetic connectivity of a recently endangered oceanic cycad, Cycas micronesica, in Guam using EST-microsatellites
    Cibrian-Jaramillo, Angelica
    Daly, A. C.
    Brenner, E.
    Desalle, R.
    Marler, T. E.
    [J]. MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2010, 19 (12) : 2364 - 2379
  • [7] Evolutionary explosions and the phylogenetic fuse
    Cooper, A
    Fortey, R
    [J]. TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 1998, 13 (04) : 151 - 156
  • [8] Crane P. R., 1987, ORIGIN ANGIOSPERMS T, P207
  • [9] Cenozoic extinctions account for the low diversity of extant gymnosperms compared with angiosperms
    Crisp, Michael D.
    Cook, Lyn G.
    [J]. NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2011, 192 (04) : 997 - 1009
  • [10] EXPLOSIVE RADIATION OR CRYPTIC MASS EXTINCTION? INTERPRETING SIGNATURES IN MOLECULAR PHYLOGENIES
    Crisp, Michael D.
    Cook, Lyn G.
    [J]. EVOLUTION, 2009, 63 (09) : 2257 - 2265