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      Conserving Madagascar's Freshwater Biodiversity

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          Chameleon radiation by oceanic dispersal.

          Historical biogeography is dominated by vicariance methods that search for a congruent pattern of fragmentation of ancestral distributions produced by shared Earth history. A focus of vicariant studies has been austral area relationships and the break-up of the supercontinent Gondwana. Chameleons are one of the few extant terrestrial vertebrates thought to have biogeographic patterns that are congruent with the Gondwanan break-up of Madagascar and Africa. Here we show, using molecular and morphological evidence for 52 chameleon taxa, support for a phylogeny and area cladogram that does not fit a simple vicariant history. Oceanic dispersal--not Gondwanan break-up--facilitated species radiation, and the most parsimonious biogeographic hypothesis supports a Madagascan origin for chameleons, with multiple 'out-of-Madagascar' dispersal events to Africa, the Seychelles, the Comoros archipelago, and possibly Reunion Island. Although dispersal is evident in other Indian Ocean terrestrial animal groups, our study finds substantial out-of-Madagascar species radiation, and further highlights the importance of oceanic dispersal as a potential precursor for speciation.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            BioScience
            BioScience
            American Institute of Biological Sciences
            0006-3568
            2003
            2003
            : 53
            : 11
            : 1101
            Article
            10.1641/0006-3568(2003)053[1101:CMFB]2.0.CO;2
            ffc16166-7018-478d-9f9a-4532a00cab79
            © 2003
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