Geological data indicate that the interpretation for the age-calibrated phylogeny for the Kurixalus-genus frogs of South, South-east and East Asia (Lv et al., 2018) needs to be rethought

Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2020 Apr:145:106053. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2018.02.011. Epub 2018 Feb 12.

Abstract

Recently, Lv et al. (2018) published an age-calibrated phylogenetic tree for the Kurixalus frogs, members of which occur across parts of South, South-east and East Asia. A clade on Taiwan, represented by Kurixalus idiootocus and the Kurixalus eiffingeri species complex, is deemed to have been resident since the middle Cenozoic; its closest congeners are in southern Indochina (not in the adjacent parts of south-east China), and the split between the two is dated at 32.8 Ma. Furthermore, a sub-population of Kurixalus eiffingeri is believed to have colonized islands in the western Ryukyus c. 13.5 Ma. There is, however, a problem with this scenario: the landmass regarded as modern-day Taiwan has existed only for 4-5 million years (it results from a young and ongoing tectonic-plate collision). Assuming the Kurixalus phylogeny and the dating of its branchings are correct, then a palaeobiogeographical scenario involving an older, alternative land surface with later transfer to Taiwan, possibly involving over-water dispersal, would reconcile the biology, but testing this may be difficult/impossible. If the ages of the nodes in the proposed tree are found to be significantly overestimated, the geology and biology might more easily be accommodated.

Keywords: Kurixalus; Luzon Arc; Paleogeography; Rhacophoridae; Ryukyu Islands; Taiwan.

Publication types

  • Letter
  • Comment

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Anura*
  • Asia, Eastern
  • China
  • Geology
  • Indochina
  • Islands
  • Phylogeny
  • Taiwan
  • Wetlands*