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Evoregions: Mapping Shifts in Phylogenetic Turnover Across Biogeographic Regions

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bioRxiv
DOI
10.1101/650713

Biogeographic regionalization offers context to the geographical evolution of clades. The positions of bioregions inform both the spatial location of clusters in species distribution and where their most important boundaries are. Nevertheless, defining bioregions based on species distribution alone only incidentally recovers regions that are important during the evolution of the focal group. The extent to which bioregions correspond to centers of independent diversification depends on how clusters of species composition naturally reflect the radiation of single clades, which is not the case when mixed colonization occurred. Here, we showed that using phylogenetic turnover based on fuzzy sets, instead of species composition, led to more adequate detection of evolutionary important bioregions, that is, regions that truly account for the independent diversification of lineages. Mapping those evoregions in the phylogenetic tree quickly reveals the timing and location of major shifts of biogeographic regions. Moreover, evolutionary transition zones are easily mapped, and permits the recognition of regions with high phylogenetic overlap. Our results using the global radiation of rats and mice (Muroidea) recovered four evoregions—three major evolutionary arenas corresponding to the Neotropics, a Nearctic-Siberian, and a Paleotropical-Australian evoregion, and a fourth and fuzzy Afro-Palearctic evoregion. In comparison, an analysis with a method considering species distribution alone found 52 bioregions. Evoregions is a useful framework whenever the question is related to the identification of the most important centers of a group’s diversification history and its evolutionary transitions zones.

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