Ancient geological dynamics impact neutral biodiversity accumulation and are detectable in phylogenetic reconstructions
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In: Global Ecology and Biogeography, Vol. 30, No. 8, 08.2021, p. 1633-1642.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Ancient geological dynamics impact neutral biodiversity accumulation and are detectable in phylogenetic reconstructions
AU - Herrera‐Alsina, Leonel
AU - Algar, Adam C.
AU - Bocedi, Greta
AU - Gubry‐Rangin, Cecile
AU - Lancaster, Lesley
AU - Mynard, Poppy
AU - Osborne, Owen
AU - Papadopulos, Alexander S. T.
AU - Creer, Simon
AU - Nangoy, Meis
AU - Fahri, Fahri
AU - Lupiyaningdyah, Pungki
AU - Sudiana, I. Made
AU - Juliandi, Berry
AU - Travis, Justin M. J.
PY - 2021/8
Y1 - 2021/8
N2 - Abstract: Aim: Landmasses have been continuously modified by tectonic activity, the breakup and collision of landmasses is thought to have generated or suppressed ecological opportunities, altering the rates of speciation, dispersal and extinction. However, the extent to which the signatures of past geological events are retained in modern biodiversity patterns—or obliterated by recent ecological dynamics—remains unresolved. We aim to identify the fingerprint of different scenarios of geological activity on phylogenetic trees and geographic range size distributions. Location: Global. Time period: Geological time. Major taxa studied: Theoretical predictions for any taxa. Methods: We conducted spatially explicit simulations under a neutral model of range evolution, speciation and extinction for three different geological scenarios that differed in their geological histories. We set a limit on the number of populations that locally can coexist, which, along with the geographic boundaries of landmasses, influences the rate of range expansion. Results: Our results demonstrate regions of similar size, age and ecological limits will differ in richness and macroevolutionary patterns based solely on the geological history of landmass breakup and collision even in the absence of species’ ecological differences, that is, neutrality. When landmasses collide, regional richness is higher, lineages exhibit more similar rates of speciation and phylogenetic trees are more balanced than in the geologically static scenario. Stringent local limits to coexistence yield lower regional diversity but in general do not affect our ability to distinguish geological scenarios. Main conclusions: These findings provide an alternative explanation for existence of some hotspots of diversity in areas of high geological activity. Although a limit on the number of coexisting species largely influences regional diversity, its contribution to phylogenetic patterns is lower than variation in per‐capita rates of speciation and extirpation. Importantly, these findings demonstrate the potential for inferring past geological history from distributions of phylogenies and range sizes.
AB - Abstract: Aim: Landmasses have been continuously modified by tectonic activity, the breakup and collision of landmasses is thought to have generated or suppressed ecological opportunities, altering the rates of speciation, dispersal and extinction. However, the extent to which the signatures of past geological events are retained in modern biodiversity patterns—or obliterated by recent ecological dynamics—remains unresolved. We aim to identify the fingerprint of different scenarios of geological activity on phylogenetic trees and geographic range size distributions. Location: Global. Time period: Geological time. Major taxa studied: Theoretical predictions for any taxa. Methods: We conducted spatially explicit simulations under a neutral model of range evolution, speciation and extinction for three different geological scenarios that differed in their geological histories. We set a limit on the number of populations that locally can coexist, which, along with the geographic boundaries of landmasses, influences the rate of range expansion. Results: Our results demonstrate regions of similar size, age and ecological limits will differ in richness and macroevolutionary patterns based solely on the geological history of landmass breakup and collision even in the absence of species’ ecological differences, that is, neutrality. When landmasses collide, regional richness is higher, lineages exhibit more similar rates of speciation and phylogenetic trees are more balanced than in the geologically static scenario. Stringent local limits to coexistence yield lower regional diversity but in general do not affect our ability to distinguish geological scenarios. Main conclusions: These findings provide an alternative explanation for existence of some hotspots of diversity in areas of high geological activity. Although a limit on the number of coexisting species largely influences regional diversity, its contribution to phylogenetic patterns is lower than variation in per‐capita rates of speciation and extirpation. Importantly, these findings demonstrate the potential for inferring past geological history from distributions of phylogenies and range sizes.
KW - biotic interchange
KW - diversification
KW - local species saturation
KW - macroevolutionary dynamics
KW - range size distribution
KW - regional richness
U2 - 10.1111/geb.13326
DO - 10.1111/geb.13326
M3 - Article
VL - 30
SP - 1633
EP - 1642
JO - Global Ecology and Biogeography
JF - Global Ecology and Biogeography
SN - 1466-822X
IS - 8
ER -