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Dive into the research topics where Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint is active.

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Featured researches published by Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint.


Nature Communications | 2014

The towering orogeny of New Guinea as a trigger for arthropod megadiversity

Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint; Robert Hall; Michael T. Monaghan; Katayo Sagata; Sentiko Ibalim; Helena Shaverdo; Alfried P. Vogler; Joan Pons; Michael Balke

Early studies on Melanesian mountain systems provided insights for fundamental evolutionary and ecological concepts. These island-like systems are thought to provide opportunities in the form of newly formed, competition-free niches. Here we show that a hyperdiverse radiation of freshwater arthropods originated in the emerging central New Guinea orogen, out of Australia, about 10 million years ago. Further diversification was mainly allopatric, with repeated more recent colonization of lowlands as they emerged in the form of colliding oceanic island arcs, continental fragments and the Papuan Peninsula, as well as recolonization of the central orogen. We unveil a constant and ongoing process of lineage accumulation while the carrying capacity of the island is about to be reached, suggesting that lineage diversification speed now exceeds that of landmass/new ecological opportunity formation. Therefore, the central orogeny of New Guinea acts as a motor of diversification for the entire region.


Systematic Entomology | 2017

The peril of dating beetles

Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint; Matthias Seidel; Emmanuel Arriaga-Varela; Jiří Hájek; David Král; Lukáš Sekerka; Andrew Edward Z. Short; Martin Fikáček

Recently, McKenna et al., 2015 (MCK15 hereafter) investigated the higher level phylogenetic relationships of beetles (Insecta, Coleoptera) using the most comprehensive molecular dataset to date, and inferred the absolute ages of major groups using multiple fossil calibrations across the beetle tree of life. Based on the result of their dating analysis, beetles diverged from Strepsiptera in the Early Permian c. 278.33 Ma with a 95% credibility interval (95% CI) of 288.28 to 271.89 Ma, and the crown age of Coleoptera was estimated for the Late Permian c. 252.89 Ma (95% CI: 267.68 to 238.78 Ma), supporting the view that beetles originated before and survived through the End-Permian Mass Extinction that occurred c. 252 Ma (Shen et al., 2011). However, some of the age estimates found in MCK15 are in conflict with current knowledge of the beetle fossil record (e.g. Nikolajev & Ren, 2010; Pan et al., 2011, Prokin & Ren, 2011; Fikáček et al., 2012a; Wang et al., 2013, 2014; Cai et al., 2014b, 2015a; Kirejtshuk et al., 2014; Boucher et al., 2016) and with other recently published molecular age estimates for some major beetle clades (e.g. Zhang & Zhou, 2013; Ahrens et al., 2014; Bloom et al., 2014; Kergoat et al., 2014; Kim & Farrell, 2015; Bocák et al., 2016; Gunter et al., 2016). In some cases, the difference in age estimates is significant and might change our understanding of the mode and tempo of diversification dynamics of these groups. Based on a careful examination of the data and analyses performed in MCK15, we propose that the divergence time estimates which they found are likely to underestimate clade ages. We believe this is due to the subset of fossil Coleoptera that MCK15 selected as calibration points, as well as the methodological approach used in their analyses. To explore the impact of fossil selection on the age of Coleoptera, we derived an alternative set of fossil calibration points based on best-practice recommendations (e.g. Parham et al., 2012),


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2014

Multiple transgressions of Wallace's Line explain diversity of flightless Trigonopterus weevils on Bali

Rene Tänzler; Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint; Yayuk R. Suhardjono; Michael Balke; Alexander Riedel

The fauna of Bali, situated immediately west of Wallaces Line, is supposedly of recent Javanese origin and characterized by low levels of endemicity. In flightless Trigonopterus weevils, however, we find 100% endemism for the eight species here reported for Bali. Phylogeographic analyses show extensive in situ differentiation, including a local radiation of five species. A comprehensive molecular phylogeny and ancestral area reconstruction of Indo-Malayan–Melanesian species reveals a complex colonization pattern, where the three Balinese lineages all arrived from the East, i.e. all of them transgressed Wallaces Line. Although East Java possesses a rich fauna of Trigonopterus, no exchange can be observed with Bali. We assert that the biogeographic picture of Bali has been dominated by the influx of mobile organisms from Java, but different relationships may be discovered when flightless invertebrates are studied. Our results highlight the importance of in-depth analyses of spatial patterns of biodiversity.


Ecology and Evolution | 2013

Australasian sky islands act as a diversity pump facilitating peripheral speciation and complex reversal from narrow endemic to widespread ecological supertramp

Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint; Katayo Sagata; Suriani Surbakti; Lars Hendrich; Michael Balke

The Australasian archipelago is biologically extremely diverse as a result of a highly puzzling geological and biological evolution. Unveiling the underlying mechanisms has never been more attainable as molecular phylogenetic and geological methods improve, and has become a research priority considering increasing human-mediated loss of biodiversity. However, studies of finer scaled evolutionary patterns remain rare particularly for megadiverse Melanesian biota. While oceanic islands have received some attention in the region, likewise insular mountain blocks that serve as species pumps remain understudied, even though Australasia, for example, features some of the most spectacular tropical alpine habitats in the World. Here, we sequenced almost 2 kb of mitochondrial DNA from the widespread diving beetle Rhantus suturalis from across Australasia and the Indomalayan Archipelago, including remote New Guinean highlands. Based on expert taxonomy with a multigene phylogenetic backbone study, and combining molecular phylogenetics, phylogeography, divergence time estimation, and historical demography, we recover comparably low geographic signal, but complex phylogenetic relationships and population structure within R. suturalis. Four narrowly endemic New Guinea highland species are subordinated and two populations (New Guinea, New Zealand) seem to constitute cases of ongoing speciation. We reveal repeated colonization of remote mountain chains where haplotypes out of a core clade of very widespread haplotypes syntopically might occur with well-isolated ones. These results are corroborated by a Pleistocene origin approximately 2.4 Ma ago, followed by a sudden demographic expansion 600,000 years ago that may have been initiated through climatic adaptations. This study is a snapshot of the early stages of lineage diversification by peripatric speciation in Australasia, and supports New Guinea sky islands as cradles of evolution, in line with geological evidence suggesting very recent origin of high altitudes in the region.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Deciphering the evolution of birdwing butterflies 150 years after Alfred Russel Wallace

Fabien L. Condamine; Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint; Anne-Laure Clamens; Gwenaëlle Genson; Felix A. H. Sperling; Gael J. Kergoat

One hundred and fifty years after Alfred Wallace studied the geographical variation and species diversity of butterflies in the Indomalayan-Australasian Archipelago, the processes responsible for their biogeographical pattern remain equivocal. We analysed the macroevolutionary mechanisms accounting for the temporal and geographical diversification of the charismatic birdwing butterflies (Papilionidae), a major focus of Wallace’s pioneering work. Bayesian phylogenetics and dating analyses of the birdwings were conducted using mitochondrial and nuclear genes. The combination of maximum likelihood analyses to estimate biogeographical history and diversification rates reveals that diversity-dependence processes drove the radiation of birdwings, and that speciation was often associated with founder-events colonizing new islands, especially in Wallacea. Palaeo-environment diversification models also suggest that high extinction rates occurred during periods of elevated sea level and global warming. We demonstrated a pattern of spatio-temporal habitat dynamics that continuously created or erased habitats suitable for birdwing biodiversity. Since birdwings were extinction-prone during the Miocene (warmer temperatures and elevated sea levels), the cooling period after the mid-Miocene climatic optimum fostered birdwing diversification due to the release of extinction. This also suggests that current global changes may represent a serious conservation threat to this flagship group.


Systematic Biology | 2015

Unveiling the Diversification Dynamics of Australasian Predaceous Diving Beetles in the Cenozoic

Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint; Fabien L. Condamine; Oliver Hawlitschek; Chris H. S. Watts; Nick Porch; Lars Hendrich; Michael Balke

During the Cenozoic, Australia experienced major climatic shifts that have had dramatic ecological consequences for the modern biota. Mesic tropical ecosystems were progressively restricted to the coasts and replaced by arid-adapted floral and faunal communities. Whilst the role of aridification has been investigated in a wide range of terrestrial lineages, the response of freshwater clades remains poorly investigated. To gain insights into the diversification processes underlying a freshwater radiation, we studied the evolutionary history of the Australasian predaceous diving beetles of the tribe Hydroporini (147 described species). We used an integrative approach including the latest methods in phylogenetics, divergence time estimation, ancestral character state reconstruction, and likelihood-based methods of diversification rate estimation. Phylogenies and dating analyses were reconstructed with molecular data from seven genes (mitochondrial and nuclear) for 117 species (plus 12 outgroups). Robust and well-resolved phylogenies indicate a late Oligocene origin of Australasian Hydroporini. Biogeographic analyses suggest an origin in the East Coast region of Australia, and a dynamic biogeographic scenario implying dispersal events. The group successfully colonized the tropical coastal regions carved by a rampant desertification, and also colonized groundwater ecosystems in Central Australia. Diversification rate analyses suggest that the ongoing aridification of Australia initiated in the Miocene contributed to a major wave of extinctions since the late Pliocene probably attributable to an increasing aridity, range contractions and seasonally disruptions resulting from Quaternary climatic changes. When comparing subterranean and epigean genera, our results show that contrasting mechanisms drove their diversification and therefore current diversity pattern. The Australasian Hydroporini radiation reflects a combination of processes that promoted both diversification, resulting from new ecological opportunities driven by initial aridification, and a subsequent loss of mesic adapted diversity due to increasing aridity.


Frontiers in Zoology | 2013

Biodiversity into your hands - A call for a virtual global natural history 'metacollection'

Michael Balke; Stefan Schmidt; Axel Hausmann; Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint; Johannes Bergsten; Matthew L. Buffington; Christoph Häuser; Alexander Kroupa; Gregor Hagedorn; Alexander Riedel; Andrew Polaszek; Rosichon Ubaidillah; Lars Krogmann; Andreas Zwick; Martin Fikáček; Jiří Hájek; Mariano C. Michat; Christopher H. Dietrich; Beth Mantle; Peter K. L. Ng; Donald Hobern

BackgroundMany scientific disciplines rely on correct taxon delineations and identifications. So does a great part of the general public as well as decision makers. Researchers, students and enthusiastic amateurs often feel frustrated because information about species remains scattered, difficult to access, or difficult to decipher. Together, this affects almost anyone who wishes to identify species or verify identifications. Many remedies have been proposed, but we argue that the role of natural history collections remains insufficiently appreciated. We suggest using state-of-the-art mass imaging technology and to join forces to create a global natural history metacollection on the internet, providing access to the morphology of tens of millions of specimens and making them available for automated digital image analysis.DiscussionRobotic high-resolution imaging technology and fast (high performance) computer-based image stitching make it now feasible to digitize entire collection drawers typically used for arthropod collections, or trays or containers used for other objects. Resolutions of 500 megapixels and much higher are already utilized to capture the contents of 40x50 cm collection drawers, providing amazing detail of specimens. Flanked by metadata entry, this helps to create access to tens of thousands of specimens in days. By setting priorities and combining the holdings of the most comprehensive collections for certain taxa, drawer digitizing offers the unique opportunity to create a global, virtual metacollection.The taxonomic and geographic coverage of such a collection could never be achieved by a single institution or individual. We argue that by joining forces, many new impulses will emerge for systematic biology, related fields and understanding of biodiversity in general.Digitizing drawers containing unidentified, little-curated specimens is a contribution towards the beginning of a new era of online curation. It also will help taxonomists and curators to discover and process the millions of “gems” of undescribed species hidden in museum accessions.SummaryOur proposal suggests creating virtual, high-resolution image resources that will, for the first time in history, provide access for expert scientists as well as students and the general public to the enormous wealth of the world’s natural history collections. We foresee that this will contribute to a better understanding, appreciation and increased use of biodiversity resources and the natural history collections serving this cause.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Palaeoenvironmental shifts drove the adaptive radiation of a noctuid stemborer tribe (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae, Apameini) in the miocene.

Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint; Fabien L. Condamine; Gael J. Kergoat; Claire Capdevielle-Dulac; Jérôme Barbut; Jean-François Silvain; Bruno Le Rü

Between the late Oligocene and the early Miocene, climatic changes have shattered the faunal and floral communities and drove the apparition of new ecological niches. Grassland biomes began to supplant forestlands, thus favouring a large-scale ecosystem turnover. The independent adaptive radiations of several mammal lineages through the evolution of key innovations are classic examples of these changes. However, little is known concerning the evolutionary history of other herbivorous groups in relation with this modified environment. It is especially the case in phytophagous insect communities, which have been rarely studied in this context despite their ecological importance. Here, we investigate the phylogenetic and evolutionary patterns of grass-specialist moths from the species-rich tribe Apameini (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae). The molecular dating analyses carried out over the corresponding phylogenetic framework reveal an origin around 29 million years ago for the Apameini. Ancestral state reconstructions indicate (i) a potential Palaearctic origin of the tribe Apameini associated with a major dispersal event in Afrotropics for the subtribe Sesamiina; (ii) a recent colonization from Palaearctic of the New World and Oriental regions by several independent lineages; and (iii) an ancestral association of the tribe Apameini over grasses (Poaceae). Diversification analyses indicate that diversification rates have not remained constant during the evolution of the group, as underlined by a significant shift in diversification rates during the early Miocene. Interestingly, this age estimate is congruent with the development of grasslands at this time. Rather than clade ages, variations in diversification rates among genera better explain the current differences in species diversity. Our results underpin a potential adaptive radiation of these phytophagous moths with the family Poaceae in relation with the major environmental shifts that have occurred in the Miocene.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2012

Pleistocene climate change promoted rapid diversification of aquatic invertebrates in Southeast Australia

Oliver Hawlitschek; Lars Hendrich; Marianne Espeland; Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint; Martin J. Genner; Michael Balke

BackgroundThe Pleistocene Ice Ages were the most recent geohistorical event of major global impact, but their consequences for most parts of the Southern hemisphere remain poorly known. We investigate a radiation of ten species of Sternopriscus, the most species-rich genus of epigean Australian diving beetles. These species are distinct based on genital morphology but cannot be distinguished readily by mtDNA and nDNA because of genotype sharing caused by incomplete lineage sorting. Their genetic similarity suggests a Pleistocene origin.ResultsWe use a dataset of 3858 bp of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA to reconstruct a phylogeny of Sternopriscus using gene and species trees. Diversification analyses support the finding of a recent rapid speciation event with estimated speciation rates of up to 2.40 species per MY, which is considerably higher than the proposed average rate of 0.16 species per MY for insects. Additionally, we use ecological niche modeling and analyze data on habitat preferences to test for niche divergence between species of the recent Sternopriscus radiation. These analyses show that the species can be characterized by a set of ecological variables referring to habitat, climate and altitude.ConclusionsOur results suggest that the repeated isolation of populations in glacial refugia might have led to divergent ecological adaptations and the fixation of morphological traits supporting reproductive isolation and therefore may have promoted speciation. The recent Sternopriscus radiation fulfills many characteristics of a species flock and would be the first described example of an aquatic insect species flock. We argue that the species of this group may represent a stage in speciation past the species flock condition because of their mostly broad and often non-overlapping ranges and preferences for different habitat types.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Phylogenetic niche conservatism explains an inverse latitudinal diversity gradient in freshwater arthropods

Jérôme Morinière; Matthew H. Van Dam; Oliver Hawlitschek; Johannes Bergsten; Mariano C. Michat; Lars Hendrich; Ignacio Ribera; Emmanuel F. A. Toussaint; Michael Balke

The underlying mechanisms responsible for the general increase in species richness from temperate regions to the tropics remain equivocal. Many hypotheses have been proposed to explain this astonishing pattern but additional empirical studies are needed to shed light on the drivers at work. Here we reconstruct the evolutionary history of the cosmopolitan diving beetle subfamily Colymbetinae, the majority of which are found in the Northern hemisphere, hence exhibiting an inversed latitudinal diversity gradient. We reconstructed a dated phylogeny using 12 genes, to investigate the biogeographical history and diversification dynamics in the Colymbetinae. We aimed to identify the role that phylogenetic niche conservatism plays in the inversed diversification pattern seen in this group. Our results suggest that Colymbetinae originated in temperate climates, which supports the hypothesis that their distribution is the result of an ancestral adaptation to temperate environmental conditions rather than tropical origins, and that temperate niche conservatism can generate and/or maintain inverse latitudinal diversity gradients.

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Lars Hendrich

Free University of Berlin

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Mariano C. Michat

University of Buenos Aires

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Oliver Hawlitschek

Spanish National Research Council

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Athena Lam

University of California

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Martin Fikáček

Charles University in Prague

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Alexander Riedel

State Museum of Natural History Karlsruhe

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