Taxonomy,phylogeny,and biogeography of the Oriental subfamily Perittopinae China&Usinger,1949(Hemiptera:Heteroptera:Veliidae)OACSCDCSTPCD
The collision of the Indian and Eurasian plates during the Eocene represents a major tectonic shift that significantly altered biotic dynamics and promoted species diversification across the Oriental region.To explain the diversification of taxa from the Indian subcontinent into Southeast Asia,two principal hypotheses have been proposed:the“Biotic-ferry”and“Step-stone”models.The subfamily Perittopinae,a lineage of semi-aquatic bugs comprising a single genus and 20 extant species,provides an ideal system for testing these hypotheses due to its disjunct distribution spanning the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia.This study conducted a comprehensive taxonomic analysis of the entire subfamily,incorporating newly defined morphological characters and multilocus phylogenetic analyses to reconstruct evolutionary relationships and historical biogeography.Morphological and phylogenetic evidence confirmed the monophyly of Perittopinae and supported the establishment of three new genera-Indoperittopus gen.nov.,Pachyperittopus gen.nov.,and Falciperittopus gen.nov.-in addition to four new species and four new combinations.Biogeographic reconstructions indicated a southern Indian origin,with initial diversification potentially occurring during the mid-Paleocene,coinciding with the major phases of the India-Eurasia collision.Subsequent range expansion over marine barriers facilitated colonization of the northern Sunda Shelf,consistent with the“Step-stone”dispersal mechanism.Later northward expansion from the southern Sunda Shelf during the early Miocene triggered further diversification of the genus Perittopus within the Indo-China Peninsula.These findings advance understanding of Perittopinae systematics,phylogeny,and historical biogeography,identifying the northward drift of the Indian plate and its eventual collision with Eurasia as catalysts of diversification within this semi-aquatic lineage.
Mu Qiao;Ze-Zhong Jin;Herbert Zettel;Katharina Ehrengruber;Chen Liu;Zi-He Li;Zhao-Qi Leng;Si-Ying Fu;Wen-Jun Bu;Zhen Ye
Institute of Entomology,College of Life Sciences,Nankai University,Tianjin 300071,ChinaInstitute of Entomology,College of Life Sciences,Nankai University,Tianjin 300071,China2^(nd)Zoological Department,Natural History Museum Vienna,Vienna 1010,Austria2^(nd)Zoological Department,Natural History Museum Vienna,Vienna 1010,AustriaInstitute of Entomology,College of Life Sciences,Nankai University,Tianjin 300071,ChinaInstitute of Entomology,College of Life Sciences,Nankai University,Tianjin 300071,ChinaInstitute of Entomology,College of Life Sciences,Nankai University,Tianjin 300071,ChinaInstitute of Entomology,College of Life Sciences,Nankai University,Tianjin 300071,ChinaInstitute of Entomology,College of Life Sciences,Nankai University,Tianjin 300071,ChinaInstitute of Entomology,College of Life Sciences,Nankai University,Tianjin 300071,China
生物科学
DiversificationHistorical biogeographyIndia-Eurasia collisionPerittopinaePhylogenyTaxonomy
《Zoological Research》 2025 (5)
P.1059-1078,20
supported by the Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin,China(24JCYBJC01910)National Natural Science Foundation of China(32322012,32470467)。
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