4.7 Article

Into the Andes: multiple independent colonizations drive montane diversity in the Neotropical clearwing butterflies Godyridina

期刊

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
卷 25, 期 22, 页码 5765-5784

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.13773

关键词

Andes; biogeography; Godyridina; Ithomiini; Lepidoptera; Neotropics trait-dependent diversification

资金

  1. ATIP (CNRS, France)
  2. Ecole Doctorale 227 (France)
  3. ANR grant SPECREP
  4. Royal Society (UK)
  5. FAPESP [BIOTA-FAPESP 2011/50225-3, 2012/50260-6, 2013/50297-0]
  6. Brazilian Research Council-CNPq [302585/2011-7]
  7. Brazilian Research Council-CNPq (SIS-BIOTA-Brasil/CNPq) [563332/2010-7]
  8. grants of 'Dimensions US-Biota-Sao Paulo'
  9. US NSF
  10. NASA
  11. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DEB-1256742]
  12. Florida Natural History Museum Associates
  13. National Geographic Society
  14. NSF [DEB-0639861]
  15. Leverhulme Trust
  16. Darwin Initiative
  17. BBSRC [BB/G006903/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  18. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BB/G006903/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  19. Natural Environment Research Council [NER/A/S/2003/00419] Funding Source: researchfish

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Understanding why species richness peaks along the Andes is a fundamental question in the study of Neotropical biodiversity. Several biogeographic and diversification scenarios have been proposed in the literature, but there is confusion about the processes underlying each scenario, and assessing their relative contribution is not straightforward. Here, we propose to refine these scenarios into a framework which evaluates four evolutionary mechanisms: higher speciation rate in the Andes, lower extinction rates in the Andes, older colonization times and higher colonization rates of the Andes from adjacent areas. We apply this framework to a species-rich subtribe of Neotropical butterflies whose diversity peaks in the Andes, the Godyridina (Nymphalidae: Ithomiini). We generated a time-calibrated phylogeny of the Godyridina and fitted time-dependent diversification models. Using trait-dependent diversification models and ancestral state reconstruction methods we then compared different biogeographic scenarios. We found strong evidence that the rates of colonization into the Andes were higher than the other way round. Those colonizations and the subsequent local diversification at equal rates in the Andes and in non-Andean regions mechanically increased the species richness of Andean regions compared to that of non-Andean regions ('species-attractor' hypothesis). We also found support for increasing speciation rates associated with Andean lineages. Our work highlights the importance of the Andean slopes in repeatedly attracting non-Andean lineages, most likely as a result of the diversity of habitats and/or host plants. Applying this analytical framework to other clades will bring important insights into the evolutionary mechanisms underlying the most species-rich biodiversity hotspot on the planet.

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