@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20246,
author = {Anne D Yoder and Melissa M Burns and Sarah Zehr and Thomas Delefosse and G?raldine Veron and Steven M Goodman and John Flynn},
title = {Single origin of Malagasy Carnivora from an African ancestor.},
year = {2003},
keywords = {},
doi = {10.1038/nature01303},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {421},
number = {},
pages = {734--737},
abstract = {The Carnivora are one of only four orders of terrestrial mammals living in Madagascar today. All four (carnivorans, primates, rodents and lipotyphlan insectivores) are placental mammals with limited means for dispersal, yet they occur on a large island that has been surrounded by a formidable oceanic barrier for at least 88 million years, predating the age of origin for any of these groups. Even so, as many as four colonizations of Madagascar have been proposed for the Carnivora alone5. The mystery of the island?s mammalian origins is confounded by its poor Tertiary fossil record, which leaves us with no direct means for estimating dates of initial diversification. Here we use a multi- gene phylogenetic analysis to show that Malagasy carnivorans are monophyletic and thus the product of a single colonization of Madagascar by an African ancestor. Furthermore, a bayesian analysis6 of divergence ages for Malagasy carnivorans and lemuri- forms indicates that their respective colonizations were tem- porally separated by tens of millions of years. We therefore conclude that a single event, such as vicariance or common dispersal, cannot explain the presence of both groups in Madagascar.}
}
Citation for Study 12161

Citation title:
"Single origin of Malagasy Carnivora from an African ancestor.".

Study name:
"Single origin of Malagasy Carnivora from an African ancestor.".

This study is part of submission 12161
(Status: Published).
Citation
Yoder A.D., Burns M.M., Zehr S., Delefosse T., Veron G., Goodman S.M., & Flynn J. 2003. Single origin of Malagasy Carnivora from an African ancestor. Nature, 421: 734-737.
Authors
-
Yoder A.D.
-
Burns M.M.
-
Zehr S.
-
Delefosse T.
-
Veron G.
-
Goodman S.M.
-
Flynn J.
Abstract
The Carnivora are one of only four orders of terrestrial mammals living in Madagascar today. All four (carnivorans, primates, rodents and lipotyphlan insectivores) are placental mammals with limited means for dispersal, yet they occur on a large island that has been surrounded by a formidable oceanic barrier for at least 88 million years, predating the age of origin for any of these groups. Even so, as many as four colonizations of Madagascar have been proposed for the Carnivora alone5. The mystery of the island?s mammalian origins is confounded by its poor Tertiary fossil record, which leaves us with no direct means for estimating dates of initial diversification. Here we use a multi- gene phylogenetic analysis to show that Malagasy carnivorans are monophyletic and thus the product of a single colonization of Madagascar by an African ancestor. Furthermore, a bayesian analysis6 of divergence ages for Malagasy carnivorans and lemuri- forms indicates that their respective colonizations were tem- porally separated by tens of millions of years. We therefore conclude that a single event, such as vicariance or common dispersal, cannot explain the presence of both groups in Madagascar.
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S12161
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20246,
author = {Anne D Yoder and Melissa M Burns and Sarah Zehr and Thomas Delefosse and G?raldine Veron and Steven M Goodman and John Flynn},
title = {Single origin of Malagasy Carnivora from an African ancestor.},
year = {2003},
keywords = {},
doi = {10.1038/nature01303},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Nature},
volume = {421},
number = {},
pages = {734--737},
abstract = {The Carnivora are one of only four orders of terrestrial mammals living in Madagascar today. All four (carnivorans, primates, rodents and lipotyphlan insectivores) are placental mammals with limited means for dispersal, yet they occur on a large island that has been surrounded by a formidable oceanic barrier for at least 88 million years, predating the age of origin for any of these groups. Even so, as many as four colonizations of Madagascar have been proposed for the Carnivora alone5. The mystery of the island?s mammalian origins is confounded by its poor Tertiary fossil record, which leaves us with no direct means for estimating dates of initial diversification. Here we use a multi- gene phylogenetic analysis to show that Malagasy carnivorans are monophyletic and thus the product of a single colonization of Madagascar by an African ancestor. Furthermore, a bayesian analysis6 of divergence ages for Malagasy carnivorans and lemuri- forms indicates that their respective colonizations were tem- porally separated by tens of millions of years. We therefore conclude that a single event, such as vicariance or common dispersal, cannot explain the presence of both groups in Madagascar.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 20246
AU - Yoder,Anne D
AU - Burns,Melissa M
AU - Zehr,Sarah
AU - Delefosse,Thomas
AU - Veron,G?raldine
AU - Goodman,Steven M
AU - Flynn,John
T1 - Single origin of Malagasy Carnivora from an African ancestor.
PY - 2003
KW -
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature01303
N2 - The Carnivora are one of only four orders of terrestrial mammals living in Madagascar today. All four (carnivorans, primates, rodents and lipotyphlan insectivores) are placental mammals with limited means for dispersal, yet they occur on a large island that has been surrounded by a formidable oceanic barrier for at least 88 million years, predating the age of origin for any of these groups. Even so, as many as four colonizations of Madagascar have been proposed for the Carnivora alone5. The mystery of the island?s mammalian origins is confounded by its poor Tertiary fossil record, which leaves us with no direct means for estimating dates of initial diversification. Here we use a multi- gene phylogenetic analysis to show that Malagasy carnivorans are monophyletic and thus the product of a single colonization of Madagascar by an African ancestor. Furthermore, a bayesian analysis6 of divergence ages for Malagasy carnivorans and lemuri- forms indicates that their respective colonizations were tem- porally separated by tens of millions of years. We therefore conclude that a single event, such as vicariance or common dispersal, cannot explain the presence of both groups in Madagascar.
L3 - 10.1038/nature01303
JF - Nature
VL - 421
IS -
SP - 734
EP - 737
ER -