4.5 Article

Multiple mountain-hopping colonization of sky-islands on the two sides of Tropical Africa during the Pleistocene: The afroalpine Festuca grasses

期刊

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY
卷 48, 期 8, 页码 1858-1874

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jbi.14117

关键词

afroalpine Festuca; dispersal cost analysis; ecological niche modelling; long‐ distance dispersal; mountain‐ hopping colonization; phylogeography; Tropical Africa

资金

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [CGL2012-39953-C02-01]
  2. Spanish Aragon Government-European Social Fund [A01-17R A01-20R]
  3. European Social Fund [FEDER 2014-2020]
  4. Norwegian NUFU [2007/1058]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study reveals higher genetic diversity in the westernmost populations of East Africa, which show similarities with West African populations and the Ethiopian Simen Mountains. Multiple long-distance dispersals (LDD) of Festuca abyssinica among eastern African sky-islands were supported, with at least two dispersal events between the two sides of Africa.
Aim The afroalpine sky-islands present one of the most interesting models to study discrete biogeographic patterns in a terrestrial island system. Here, we performed range-wide sampling of the afroalpine clade of fine-leaved Festuca grasses and address a set of hypotheses on its origin and dispersal. We focus on the widespread species F. abyssinica and explore the role of the eastern and western African sky-islands. Location Tropical Africa. Taxon Afroalpine Festuca. Methods We combine data from field surveys, phylogeography, coalescence-based dispersal modelling, and environmental niche and dispersal costs analyses to infer patterns of genetic diversity, genealogical relationships, colonization routes and range shifts under two Quaternary climates (current - to represent warm periods; and Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) - to represent cold periods). Results The westernmost populations in East Africa show higher genetic diversity and higher similarities with the West African populations and the Ethiopian Simen Mountains than with the more closely situated East African populations. Dispersal models and ecological niche predictions of F. abyssinica supported multiple long-distance dispersals (LDD) among the eastern African sky-islands, and at least two dispersal events between the two sides of Africa (0.86 Ma and 0.52 Ma), probably facilitated by bridging suitable habitats during the coldest periods of the Pleistocene. Main conclusions We reconstruct an afroalpine mountain-hopping dispersal model, with migrations occurring between adjacent sky-islands in eastern Africa, and through a Central Africa-Sudan pathway connecting afroalpine patches on the two sides of the continent.

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