AI Article Synopsis

  • The Corixoidea is a large group of aquatic bugs with over 600 species, primarily found in the Holarctic region, which is part of the Laurasian landmass.
  • A study investigated their evolutionary history and geographical distribution by analyzing both physical traits and DNA from 122 different taxa.
  • Findings suggest that Corixoidea began diversifying in Gondwana around 224 million years ago, with significant diversification occurring in the Holarctic as Laurasia separated from Gondwana, creating new ecological opportunities for these insects.

Article Abstract

The water boatmen of Corixoidea, a group of aquatic bugs with more than 600 extant species, is one of the largest superfamilies of Nepomorpha. Contrary to the other nepomorphan lineages, the Corixoidea are most diverse in the Laurasian remnant Holarctic region. To explicitly test whether the present-day Holarctic distribution of diverse corixids is associated with the arising of the Laurasian landmass that was separated from Gondwana, we investigated the phylogeny, divergence times and historical biogeography of Corixoidea based on morphological and molecular characters sampled from 122 taxa representing all families, subfamilies, tribes and approximately 54 % of the genera. Our results were largely congruent with the phylogenetic relationships within the established nepomorphan phylogenetic context. The fossil calibrated chronogram, diversification analysis and ancestral ranges reconstruction indicated that Corixoidea began to diversify in Gondwana in the late Triassic approximately at 224 Ma and the arising of the most diverse subfamily Corixinae in Corixidae in the Holarctic region was largely congruent with the time of separation of Laurasia from Gondwana. The large-scale expansion of the temperate and cold zones on the northward-moving Laurasian landmass after the breakup of the Pangea provided new aquatic niches and ecological opportunities for promoting rapid diversification for the Holarctic corixid lineage.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2022.107698DOI Listing

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