We explored the extent to which Gondwanan vicariance contributed to the circum‐Antarctic distribution of the mite harvestman family Pettalidae, a group of small, dispersal‐limited arachnids whose phylogeny has been poorly resolved, precluding rigorous biogeographic hypothesis testing.
Continental landmasses of former temperate Gondwana (Chile, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Australia and New Zealand).
Pettalidae, Opiliones.
We generated transcriptomes for a phylogeny of 16 pettalids, spanning 9 genera. Data were analysed using maximum likelihood, Bayesian inference and coalescence methods. The phylogenetic position of the Sri Lankan genus
We recovered a well‐supported topology with a division between taxa from landmasses that made up East Gondwana, and a grade of taxa from West Gondwana.
Given that the order of cladogenesis corresponds to the order in which Gondwana fragmented, and the concurrent timing of vicariance and rifting, Gondwanan breakup explains major biogeographic patterns in Pettalidae. Some divergences predate initial rifting, but there is no evidence of