An inverse latitudinal gradient in speciation rate for marine fishes

被引:0
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作者
Daniel L. Rabosky
Jonathan Chang
Pascal O. Title
Peter F. Cowman
Lauren Sallan
Matt Friedman
Kristin Kaschner
Cristina Garilao
Thomas J. Near
Marta Coll
Michael E. Alfaro
机构
[1] University of Michigan,Museum of Zoology, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
[2] University of California,Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
[3] Yale University,Peabody Museum of Natural History and Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
[4] ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies,Department of Earth and Environmental Science
[5] James Cook University,Museum of Paleontology and Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences
[6] University of Pennsylvania,Department of Biometry and Environmental System Analysis
[7] University of Michigan,Instituto de Ciencias de Mar
[8] Albert-Ludwigs-University of Freiburg,undefined
[9] GEOMAR Helmholtz-Zentrum für Ozeanforschung,undefined
[10] Spanish National Research Council (ICM-CSIC),undefined
来源
Nature | 2018年 / 559卷
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摘要
Far more species of organisms are found in the tropics than in temperate and polar regions, but the evolutionary and ecological causes of this pattern remain controversial1,2. Tropical marine fish communities are much more diverse than cold-water fish communities found at higher latitudes3,4, and several explanations for this latitudinal diversity gradient propose that warm reef environments serve as evolutionary ‘hotspots’ for species formation5–8. Here we test the relationship between latitude, species richness and speciation rate across marine fishes. We assembled a time-calibrated phylogeny of all ray-finned fishes (31,526 tips, of which 11,638 had genetic data) and used this framework to describe the spatial dynamics of speciation in the marine realm. We show that the fastest rates of speciation occur in species-poor regions outside the tropics, and that high-latitude fish lineages form new species at much faster rates than their tropical counterparts. High rates of speciation occur in geographical regions that are characterized by low surface temperatures and high endemism. Our results reject a broad class of mechanisms under which the tropics serve as an evolutionary cradle for marine fish diversity and raise new questions about why the coldest oceans on Earth are present-day hotspots of species formation.
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页码:392 / 395
页数:3
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