Evolution on a shaky piece of Gondwana: Is local endemism recent in New Caledonia?

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Abstract

New Caledonia is well known as a hot spot of biodiversity whose origin as a land mass can be traced back to the Gondwanan supercontinent. The local flora and fauna, in addition to being remarkably rich and endemic, comprise many supposedly relictual groups. Does the New Caledonian biota date back to Gondwanan times, building up its richness and endemism over 100 Myr or does it result from recent diversifications after Tertiary geological catastrophic events? Here we use a molecular phylogenetic approach to answer this question with the study of the Neocaledonian cockroach genus Angustonicus belonging to the subfamily Tryonicinae from Australia and New Caledonia. Both geological and molecular dating show that the diversification of this group is less than two million years old, whatever the date of its origin itself. This dating is not consistent with hypotheses of Gondwanan richness and endemism in New Caledonian biota. In other terms, local richness and endemism at the specific level are not necessarily related to an old Gondwanan origin of the Neocaledonian groups. © The Willi Hennig Society 2005.

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Murienne, J., Grandcolas, P., Piulachs, M. D., Bellés, X., D’Haese, C., Legendre, F., … Guilbert, E. (2005). Evolution on a shaky piece of Gondwana: Is local endemism recent in New Caledonia? Cladistics, 21(1), 2–7. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-0031.2004.00042.x

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