6533b854fe1ef96bd12aebc7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Distribution, diversity patterns and faunogenesis of the millipedes (Diplopoda) of the Himalayas

Jochen MartensSergei I. Golovatch

subject

0106 biological sciencesSympatryAsiaArthropodaRange (biology)Fauna010607 zoologyDistribution (economics)010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesDiplopodalcsh:ZoologyVicariancefaunisticsAnimalialcsh:QL1-991Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsbusiness.industryEcologyPlio-PleistocenePalaearcticGeographyPlio-PleistoceneAnimal Science and ZoologybusinessResearch Article

description

The Himalayas support a highly rich, diverse, multi-layered, mostly endemic diplopod fauna which presently contains >270 species, 53 genera, 23 families and 13 orders. This is the result of mixing the ancient, apparently Tertiary and younger, Plio-Pleistocene elements of various origins, as well as the most recent anthropochore (= man-mediated) introductions. At the species and, partly, generic levels, the fauna is largely autochthonous and sylvicolous, formed through aboundingin situradiation and vicariance events. In general, the species from large genera and families tend to occupy a wide range of altitudes, but nearly each of the constituent species shows a distribution highly localized both horizontally and altitudinally, yet quite often with sympatry or even syntopy involved. The bulk of the fauna is Indo-Malayan in origin, with individual genera or families shared with those of SE Asia (mostly) and/or S India (few). Sino-Himalayan and, especially, Palaearctic components are subordinate, but also clearly distinguishable.

https://zenodo.org/record/1222248