2014
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5001
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The towering orogeny of New Guinea as a trigger for arthropod megadiversity

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Cited by 169 publications
(183 citation statements)
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References 56 publications
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“…As already mentioned above, both groups build a monophyletic clade according to the results of molecular analyses (Toussaint et al 2014;unpublished results). This monophyly is also supported morphologically by the structure and setation of the male genitalia, especially of the paramere.…”
Section: Notes On Diagnostic Characters Of the Groupssupporting
confidence: 52%
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“…As already mentioned above, both groups build a monophyletic clade according to the results of molecular analyses (Toussaint et al 2014;unpublished results). This monophyly is also supported morphologically by the structure and setation of the male genitalia, especially of the paramere.…”
Section: Notes On Diagnostic Characters Of the Groupssupporting
confidence: 52%
“…A new species group, E. okbapensis-group, is proposed for two new species and two already described ones: E. ketembang (Balke, 1998) and E. talaki (Balke, 1998) based on the shape and setation of the paramere as well as on results of a phylogenetic analysis of molecular data (Toussaint et al 2014). It is shown that representatives of another species group, namely E. aipo-group, share the same shape and setation of the paramere with the new species group and, therefore, both are most likely closely related.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, we were not able to use a secondary calibration for the Trigonopterus radiation. In a first calibration, several substitution rates of Coleoptera have been used (calculated for the COI marker using multiple fossils and geological evidences [31][32][33]-see [34] for a rationale on the use of this interval). The early diversification of Trigonopterus would have taken place more than 60 Ma which appears significantly too old.…”
Section: (D) Dating and Ancestral Area Reconstructionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Present-day New Guinea has a highly complex orogenic history, but the most recent geological reconstructions of the region [36,37] suggest that at most small and low-lying islands were emergent before 30 Ma. If some land did exist before 30 Ma, it was lacking the horizontal and vertical dimension required to facilitate lineage diversification; habitats fully explaining the observed diversification patterns are more recent and likely of Miocenic age ( [34]; R. Hall 2013, personal communication). This was reflected in empirical studies (birds [42], rainbow fishes [43], diving beetles [34]) which estimate the onset of Papuan lineage diversification around 30 Ma or more recent.…”
Section: (D) Dating and Ancestral Area Reconstructionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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