Phylogenomics and Fossilized Birth-Death Dating Reveals Gondawanan Origin and Extensive Post-Cretaceous Diversification of Worldwide Cicadidae.

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Abstract

The Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction resulted in a massive turnover in biodiversity. The oldest fossils of the globally-distributed insect family Cicadidae date to the Paleocene, suggesting that this family diversified after the K-Pg boundary. We analyzed 490 nuclear Anchored Hybrid Enrichment loci as well as mitochondrial genomes for the Cicadidae, sampling all five subfamilies, 85% of tribes, and 25% of genera, using concatenated maximum-likelihood and multi-species coalescent approaches to resolve the phylogenetic relationships of Cicadidae subfamilies. We estimated divergence times of Cicadidae lineages using a fossilized birth-death model augmented into the multispecies coalescent with 44 fossil taxa. We estimated a Cretaceous origin for Cicadidae with four of the five subfamilies diversifying shortly after the K-Pg extinction event. Our fossilized birth-death tip-dating approach improved the precision of age estimates for many cicada clades compared to dates based on node-calibration from previous studies. An ancestral area reconstruction inferred a Gondwanan origin for Cicadidae with multiple lineages dispersing across the planet. Our results augment insight into how the K-Pg mass extinction shaped present-day diversity.

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