Sunday, March 20, 2022

[Herpetology • 2022] From Gondwana to the Yellow Sea, Evolutionary Diversifications of True Toads Bufo sp. in the Eastern Palearctic and A Revisit of Species Boundaries for Asian Lineages



in Othman, Litvinchuk, Maslova, Dahn, ... et Borzee, 2022. 

 Abstract
Taxa with vast distribution ranges often display unresolved phylogeographic structures and unclear taxonomic boundaries resulting in hidden diversity. This hypothesis-driven study reveals the evolutionary history of Bufonidae, covering the phylogeographic patterns found in Holarctic bufonids from the West Gondwana to the phylogenetic taxonomy of Asiatic true toads in the Eastern Palearctic. We used an integrative approach relying on fossilized birth-death calibrations, population dynamics, gene-flow, species distribution, and species delimitation modeling to resolve the biogeography of the clade and highlight cryptic lineages. We verified the near-simultaneous Miocene radiations within Western and Eastern Palearctic Bufo, c. 14.49–10.00 Mya, temporally matching with the maximum dust outflows in Central Asian deserts. Contrary to earlier studies, we demonstrated that the combined impacts of long dispersal and ice-age refugia equally contributed to the current genetic structure of Bufo in East Asia. Our findings reveal a climate-driven adaptation in septentrional Eastern Asian Bufo, explaining its range shifts toward northern latitudes. We resolve species boundaries within the Eastern Palearctic Bufo, and redefine the taxonomic and conservation units of the northeastern species: B. sachalinensis and its subspecies.

Sakhalin toad, Bufo sachalinensis 
 It is present on the Korean Peninsula (두꺼비), northeast China (东北蟾蜍) and the Primorye region.



 
 
Siti N. Othman, Spartak N. Litvinchuk, Irina Maslova, Hollis Dahn, Kevin R. Messenger, Desiree Andersen, Michael J Jowers, Yosuke Kojima, Dmitry V Skorinov, Kiyomi Yasumiba, Ming-Feng Chuang, Yi-Huey Chen, Yoonhyuk Bae, Jennifer Hoti, Yikweon Jang and Amael Borzee. 2022. From Gondwana to the Yellow Sea, Evolutionary Diversifications of True Toads Bufo sp. in the Eastern Palearctic and A Revisit of Species Boundaries for Asian Lineages. eLife. 11:e70494. DOI:  10.7554/eLife.70494
 

Editor's evaluation
Othman et al., resolve the phylogeography of Bufo at global, continental and regional scales. The strengths of the paper reside in the extreme detail, the inclusive nature of the ideas, and insightful reconstructions of the evolutionary history of Bufo species. Furthermore, taxonomic treatments are a strong part and a nice addition of the paper. The manuscript can be of interest to herpetologists, but also biogeographers and evolutionary biologists interested in the geologic history of Asia.

eLife digest
The east Asian Asiatic toad (also known by the latin name Bufo gargarizans) lives in a wide range of habitats across East Asia including forests, meadows and cultivated land. However, it remains unclear how these toads evolved and became so widespread – partly because it has proved difficult for researchers to clearly define the species and what distinguishes it from other closely-related species of toads (collectively known as Bufo toads).

Othman et al. combined several bioinformatics techniques to study Asiatic toads and 38 other species of bufonid toads from across the globe. This approach found that Bufo toads first emerged in eastern Asia between 14 and 10 million years ago. This coincides with a point in time when large swathes of land in central Asia turned from adequate to sustain toad populations into desert, suggesting the change in climate prompted the toads to migrate eastwards from central Asia. The Bufo toads then divided into two groups of species: one in mainland East Asia and the other in Japan.

Furthermore, the study revealed there is more genetic diversity – that is, more variety in the DNA of individuals – in Asiatic toads than previously thought. The findings also help to define several other species of Bufo toads more clearly and describe a new toad species restricted to the Korean Peninsula, northeastern China and the Russian Primorye region: the Sakhalin toad (Bufo sachalinensis).

This work demonstrates that a large-scale study of many species across the globe can be used to understand how the species evolved and more clearly distinguish one species from another. The findings of Othman et al. will be of interest to both professional and citizen scientists interested in the natural history of Asia. Furthermore, as several species of Bufo toads are in decline in the wild, they provide evidence that may aid future efforts to conserve them.