Evolutionary lag times and recent origin of the biota of an ancient desert (Atacama–Sechura)
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Guerrero, Pablo C.
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Evolutionary lag times and recent origin of the biota of an ancient desert (Atacama–Sechura)
Abstract
The assembly of regional biotas and organismal responses to
anthropogenic climate change both depend on the capacity of
organisms to adapt to novel ecological conditions. Here we demonstrate
the concept of evolutionary lag time, the time between
when a climatic regime or habitat develops in a region and when it
is colonized by a given clade. We analyzed the time of colonization
of four clades (three plant genera and one lizard genus) into the
Atacama–Sechura Desert of South America, one of Earth’s driest
and oldest deserts. We reconstructed time-calibrated phylogenies
for each clade and analyzed the timing of shifts in climatic distributions
and biogeography and compared these estimates to independent
geological estimates of the time of origin of these
deserts. Chaetanthera and Malesherbia (plants) and Liolaemus
(animal) invaded arid regions of the Atacama–Sechura Desert in
the last 10 million years, some 20 million years after the initial
onset of aridity in the region. There are also major lag times
between when these clades colonized the region and when they
invaded arid habitats within the region (typically 4–14 million
years). Similarly, hyperarid climates developed ∼8 million years
ago, but the most diverse plant clade in these habitats (Nolana)
only colonized them ∼2 million years ago. Similar evolutionary lag
timesmay occur in other organisms and habitats, but these results are
important in suggesting that many lineages may require very long
time scales to adapt to modern desertification and climatic change.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/119746
DOI: www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1308721110
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PNAS | July 9, 2013 | vol. 110 | no. 28 | 11469–11474
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