Phylogenetic perspectives on biome shifts in Leucocoryne (Alliaceae) in relation to climatic niche evolution in western South America
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2014Metadata
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Jara Arancio, Paola
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Phylogenetic perspectives on biome shifts in Leucocoryne (Alliaceae) in relation to climatic niche evolution in western South America
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Abstract
Aim Shifts between the western South American sclerophyll and winter-rainfall
desert biomes and their relationship to climatic niche evolution and aridity
development were investigated in the South American endemic geophytic Leucocoryne
(Alliaceae) clade.
Location Western South America.
Methods We constructed a molecular phylogeny (internal transcribed spacer,
ITS), estimated lineage divergence times, and identified ancestral biomes and
biome shifts. The multivariate climatic niche of present-day species was
described using occurrence data and bioclimatic variables. Climatic niche similarity
was evaluated using Mahalanobis and Fisher distances. Brownian motion
(BM) and Ornstein–Uhlenbeck (OU) models of evolution were used to characterize
temperature and precipitation niche evolution. Ancestral temperature
and precipitation were estimated using the phylogenetic generalized leastsquares
method.
Results Leucocoryne exhibits a low level of phylogenetic biome conservatism.
The clade arose in the early Miocene in an ancestral sclerophyll biome and
subsequently moved northwards into the arid winter-rainfall biome on two
separate occasions, during the late Miocene and Pliocene, respectively, with
very recent diversification of species in the winter-rainfall desert. Overall, the
multivariate climatic niche showed significant differentiation, and phylogenetic
and climatic niche distances were correlated. Temperature and precipitation
niche evolution within lineages followed a pattern that is consistent with stabilizing
selection (OU model).
Main conclusions The low level of phylogenetic biome conservatism found
in Leucocoryne is associated with considerable expansion of the precipitation
and temperature niche axes. Unidirectional biome shifts from a wetter biome
characterized by higher species richness and more continuous vegetation cover,
into a drier biome with lower species richness and much sparser vegetation
cover, suggest that the availability of and lower biotic resistance within open
habitats facilitated biome shifts in Leucocoryne. Incursion into the arid winterrainfall
desert and diversification there may have been facilitated by the conservative
geophytic life-form of Leucocoryne, the generally cool coastal conditions,
and the wet/dry climatic cycles occurring since the late Miocene.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
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Research was supported
by CONICYT doctoral fellowships 21040731 and
24060111 to P.J.-A. and postdoctoral fellowships to P.J.-A.
and P.G., funded by grants ICM P02-005 and PBF-23, respectively.
P.G. presently holds a FONDECYT (no. 3130729)
postdoctoral grant.
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Journal of Biogeography (J. Biogeogr.) (2014) 41, 328–338
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