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Diversity, distribution patterns, and fauno-genesis of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of mainland China

Based on all available information, 339 species from 71 genera, 26 families, and eleven orders of Diplopoda have hitherto been recorded from mainland China, the fauna thus being very rich, albeit far from completely known, comprising various zoogeographic elements and populating very different envir...

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Autores principales: Golovatch, Sergei I., Liu, Weixin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Pensoft Publishers 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7200884/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32390752
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.930.47513
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author Golovatch, Sergei I.
Liu, Weixin
author_facet Golovatch, Sergei I.
Liu, Weixin
author_sort Golovatch, Sergei I.
collection PubMed
description Based on all available information, 339 species from 71 genera, 26 families, and eleven orders of Diplopoda have hitherto been recorded from mainland China, the fauna thus being very rich, albeit far from completely known, comprising various zoogeographic elements and populating very different environments. Diplopods mainly occur in various woodlands, in caves, and high in the mountains. Most species (> 90 %, usually highly localised, including 160 cavernicoles), 18 genera, and one family are strictly endemic to continental China. Mapping not only the horizontal, but also the vertical distributions of Diplopoda in China shows the bulk of the fauna to be expectedly restricted to forested lowland and mountain biomes or their remnants. Yet some Chordeumatida, Callipodida, Polydesmida, Julida, and even Spirobolida seem to occur only in the subalpine to alpine environments and thus may provisionally be considered as truly high-montane. The long-acknowledged notions of China being a great biogeographic zone transitional between the Palaearctic and Oriental regions generally find good support in millipede distributions, in particular at the higher taxonomic levels (generic, familial, and ordinal). While the Palaearctic/Holarctic components expectedly dominate the fauna of the northern parts of the country, the Oriental ones prevail in its south and along the Pacific coast. Both realms are increasingly mixed and intermingled towards China’s centre. However, in addition to the above traditional views, based on distribution patterns alone, southern China seems to harbour a rather small, but highly peculiar faunal nucleus or origin centre of its own, whence Himalaya, Myanmar, Thailand, Indochina and/or Taiwan could have become populated by younger lineages. The millipede fauna of continental China is thus a tangled mixture of zoogeographic elements of various origins and ages, both relict and more advanced. The few anthropochores must have been the latest faunal “layer” to populate China.
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spelling pubmed-72008842020-05-09 Diversity, distribution patterns, and fauno-genesis of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of mainland China Golovatch, Sergei I. Liu, Weixin Zookeys Research Article Based on all available information, 339 species from 71 genera, 26 families, and eleven orders of Diplopoda have hitherto been recorded from mainland China, the fauna thus being very rich, albeit far from completely known, comprising various zoogeographic elements and populating very different environments. Diplopods mainly occur in various woodlands, in caves, and high in the mountains. Most species (> 90 %, usually highly localised, including 160 cavernicoles), 18 genera, and one family are strictly endemic to continental China. Mapping not only the horizontal, but also the vertical distributions of Diplopoda in China shows the bulk of the fauna to be expectedly restricted to forested lowland and mountain biomes or their remnants. Yet some Chordeumatida, Callipodida, Polydesmida, Julida, and even Spirobolida seem to occur only in the subalpine to alpine environments and thus may provisionally be considered as truly high-montane. The long-acknowledged notions of China being a great biogeographic zone transitional between the Palaearctic and Oriental regions generally find good support in millipede distributions, in particular at the higher taxonomic levels (generic, familial, and ordinal). While the Palaearctic/Holarctic components expectedly dominate the fauna of the northern parts of the country, the Oriental ones prevail in its south and along the Pacific coast. Both realms are increasingly mixed and intermingled towards China’s centre. However, in addition to the above traditional views, based on distribution patterns alone, southern China seems to harbour a rather small, but highly peculiar faunal nucleus or origin centre of its own, whence Himalaya, Myanmar, Thailand, Indochina and/or Taiwan could have become populated by younger lineages. The millipede fauna of continental China is thus a tangled mixture of zoogeographic elements of various origins and ages, both relict and more advanced. The few anthropochores must have been the latest faunal “layer” to populate China. Pensoft Publishers 2020-04-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7200884/ /pubmed/32390752 http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.930.47513 Text en Sergei I. Golovatch, Weixin Liu http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Golovatch, Sergei I.
Liu, Weixin
Diversity, distribution patterns, and fauno-genesis of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of mainland China
title Diversity, distribution patterns, and fauno-genesis of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of mainland China
title_full Diversity, distribution patterns, and fauno-genesis of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of mainland China
title_fullStr Diversity, distribution patterns, and fauno-genesis of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of mainland China
title_full_unstemmed Diversity, distribution patterns, and fauno-genesis of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of mainland China
title_short Diversity, distribution patterns, and fauno-genesis of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of mainland China
title_sort diversity, distribution patterns, and fauno-genesis of the millipedes (diplopoda) of mainland china
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7200884/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32390752
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.930.47513
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