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Resolution: standard / high Figure 1.
Cave-beetles and phylogenies. (a) Photograph of the cave-beetle species Cytodromus dapsoides (Leptoridini, Leiodidae) from the Vercors National Park in Southeast France. The tribe
Leptodirini includes about 235 genera and around 900 species, most of them exclusively
subterranean. The highest diversity is found in the north and east of the Iberian
Peninsula, Corsica and Sardinia, the southern Alps, Balkan Peninsula, Romania and
southern Russia, the Caucasus, Middle East and Iran. (b) Simplified phylogenetic tree obtained by Ribera et al. [5] using combined mitochondrial and nuclear sequences. The tree was linearized (fitted
to constancy of molecular substitution rate) using Bayesian methods. Red circles indicate
tree nodes used for calibration of the molecular clock using the mitochondrial gene
cox1 only (considering 33 million years ago for the age of initial separation of Sardinian
species from their sister lineage), and including all mitochondrial sequence information
but excluding species from Sardinia (from which only cox1 sequences were available). In the latter case an estimated age of 37.8 million years
ago was used for the separation of Bathysciola zariquieyi from its sister. The width of each clade is proportional to the number of species
included in the study. The basal Speonomidius lineage includes the muscicolus genus
Notidocharis. A geological timeline with the relevant epochs is provided below the tree. Figure
1a courtesy of Christian Vanderbergh.
Juan and Emerson Journal of Biology 2010 9:17 doi:10.1186/jbiol227 |