What drives diversification in a pantropical plant lineage with extraordinary capacity for long-distance dispersal and colonization?

被引:12
|
作者
Larridon, Isabel [1 ,2 ]
Galan Diaz, Javier [3 ]
Bauters, Kenneth [4 ]
Escudero, Marcial [5 ]
机构
[1] Royal Bot Gardens, Richmond, Surrey, England
[2] Univ Ghent, Dept Biol, Systemat & Evolutionary Bot Lab, Ghent, Belgium
[3] CSIC, Estn Biol Donana EBD, Dept Integrat Ecol, Seville, Spain
[4] Meise Bot Garden, Meise, Belgium
[5] Univ Seville, Dept Biol Vegetal & Ecol, Seville, Spain
关键词
ancestral range estimation; biogeography; Cyperaceae; dispersification; niche evolution; nutrushes; FOUNDER-EVENT SPECIATION; GEOGRAPHIC RANGE; CYPERACEAE; EVOLUTION; RADIATION; DYNAMICS; CLIMATE; SHIFTS; NICHE; RATES;
D O I
10.1111/jbi.13982
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Aim Colonization of new areas may entail shifts in diversification rates linked to biogeographical movement (dispersification), which may involve niche evolution if species were not exapted to new environments.Scleria(Cyperaceae) includesc. 250 species and has a pantropical distribution suggesting an extraordinary capacity for long-distance dispersal and colonization. We investigate patterns of diversification inScleria, and whether they are coupled with colonization events, climate niche shifts or both. Location Tropics and subtropics. Taxon NutrushesScleria(Cyperaceae). Methods We used molecular data from three DNA regions sequenced for 278 accessions representing 140Scleriataxa (53% of species) to develop a chronogram, model ancestral ranges and measure rates of diversification. Integrating data from 12,978 digitized and georeferenced herbarium records, we investigated niche evolution. Results High dispersal rates inScleria, a genus with multiple dispersal syndromes, make reconstruction of ancestral ranges at deep nodes in the phylogeny highly equivocal. Main dispersal and colonization events involve movements from South to Central America (c. 19), from Africa to Madagascar (c. 12), from Asia to Oceania (c. 7), from Africa to South America (c. 7) and Central America to South America (c. 6). The two main shifts in diversification rates happened during the warm period of the Miocene. Main conclusions Dispersification from South America to Africa without climate niche shift seems to explain the diversification shift in sectionHypoporumimplying that species were exapted. Shifts in climate niche evolution predate the second shift in diversification rates suggesting lineages were exapted prior to biogeographical movements. Within subgenusScleria, colonizations of Asia and Madagascar by sectionsElataeandAbortivae, respectively, are coupled with niche shifts suggesting that these colonizations involved climate niche adaptation.
引用
收藏
页码:64 / 77
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Long-distance dispersal of plants by vehicles as a driver of plant invasions
    Von der Lippe, Moritz
    Kowarik, Ingo
    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2007, 21 (04) : 986 - 996
  • [22] Predominantly Eastward Long-Distance Dispersal in Pantropical Ochnaceae Inferred From Ancestral Range Estimation and Phylogenomics
    Schneider, Julio V.
    Jungcurt, Tanja
    Cardoso, Domingos
    Amorim, Andre M.
    Paule, Juraj
    Zizka, Georg
    FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2022, 10
  • [23] Phylogeography of an endangered disjunct herb: long-distance dispersal, refugia and colonization routes
    Bobo-Pinilla, Javier
    Penas de Giles, Julio
    Lopez-Gonzalez, Noemi
    Mediavilla, Sonia
    Montserrat Martinez-Ortega, M.
    AOB PLANTS, 2018, 10 (05):
  • [24] Circumarctic dispersal and long-distance colonization of South America: the moss genus Cinclidium
    Pineiro, Rosalia
    Popp, Magnus
    Hassel, Kristian
    Listl, Daniela
    Westergaard, Kristine B.
    Flatberg, Kjell I.
    Stenoien, Hans K.
    Brochmann, Christian
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2012, 39 (11) : 2041 - 2051
  • [25] Directional asymmetry of long-distance dispersal and colonization could mislead reconstructions of biogeography
    Cook, LG
    Crisp, MD
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2005, 32 (05) : 741 - 754
  • [26] Molecular evidence for long-distance colonization in an Indo-Pacific seahorse lineage
    Teske, PR
    Hamilton, H
    Palsboll, PJ
    Choo, CK
    Gabr, H
    Lourie, SA
    Santos, M
    Sreepada, A
    Cherry, MI
    Matthee, CA
    MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2005, 286 : 249 - 260
  • [27] Long-Distance Wind Dispersal Drives Population Range Expansion of Solidago canadensis
    Zhang, Zheng
    Wen, Guangyue
    Bu, Dexiao
    Sun, Guojun
    Qiang, Sheng
    PLANTS-BASEL, 2022, 11 (20):
  • [28] Colonization of the Galapagos Islands by plants with no specific syndromes for long-distance dispersal: a new perspective
    Vargas, Pablo
    Heleno, R.
    Traveset, A.
    Nogales, M.
    ECOGRAPHY, 2012, 35 (01) : 33 - 43
  • [29] Colonization of host patches following long-distance dispersal by a goldenrod beetle, Trirhabda virgata
    Herzig, AL
    Root, RB
    ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, 1996, 21 (04) : 344 - 351
  • [30] Molecular signatures of long-distance oceanic dispersal and the colonization of Pacific islands in Lycium carolinianum
    Levin, Rachel A.
    Miller, Jill S.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2021, 108 (04) : 694 - 710