Article
Phylogenetic analysis of the leafhopper genus Apogonalia (Insecta: Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) and comments on the biogeography of the Caribbean islands
Registro en:
FELIZ, Márcio; MEJDALANI, Gabriel. Phylogenetic analysis of the leafhopper genus Apogonalia (Insecta: Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) and comments on the biogeography of the Caribbean islands. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, v.163, p.548–570, 2011.
0024-4082
1096-3642
Autor
Felix, Márcio
Mejdalani, Gabriel
Resumen
A phylogenetic analysis of the leafhopper genus Apogonalia was conducted based on a matrix of 40 terminal
taxa and 147 morphological characters. The analysis yielded 1391 equally most-parsimonious trees, which do
not support the monophyly of Apogonalia in the strict consensus. A successive weighting procedure yielded 62
trees in which the genus appeared as a monophyletic group. The strict consensus of these 62 trees is almost
entirely dichotomous, showing only two polytomies. The test of phylogenetic integrity was applied for distinct
variations of three species: A. germana, A. sanguinipes, and A. histrio. Only for the first species was the
conjecture that its variations belong to the same entity corroborated. The best-supported clade within Apogonalia,
which has several synapomorphies and high branch support indices, comprises nine Antillean endemic
species. This distributional pattern probably was originated by vicariance in the Late Cretaceous, when the
Proto-Antillean archipelago was pushed north-eastward by the Caribbean Plate to become the modern Greater Antilles. 2030-01-01