Couvreur Thomas L P, Chatrou Lars W, Sosef Marc S M, Richardson James E
Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Wageningen branch, Biosystematics Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
BMC Biol. 2008 Dec 16;6:54. doi: 10.1186/1741-7007-6-54.
Tropical rain forests are the most diverse terrestrial ecosystems on the planet. How this diversity evolved remains largely unexplained. In Africa, rain forests are situated in two geographically isolated regions: the West-Central Guineo-Congolian region and the coastal and montane regions of East Africa. These regions have strong floristic affinities with each other, suggesting a former connection via an Eocene pan-African rain forest. High levels of endemism observed in both regions have been hypothesized to be the result of either 1) a single break-up followed by a long isolation or 2) multiple fragmentation and reconnection since the Oligocene. To test these hypotheses the evolutionary history of endemic taxa within a rain forest restricted African lineage of the plant family Annonaceae was studied. Molecular phylogenies and divergence dates were estimated using a Bayesian relaxed uncorrelated molecular clock assumption accounting for both calibration and phylogenetic uncertainties.
Our results provide strong evidence that East African endemic lineages of Annonaceae have multiple origins dated to significantly different times spanning the Oligocene and Miocene epochs. Moreover, these successive origins (c. 33, 16 and 8 million years--Myr) coincide with known periods of aridification and geological activity in Africa that would have recurrently isolated the Guineo-Congolian rain forest from the East African one. All East African taxa were found to have diversified prior to Pleistocene times.
Molecular phylogenetic dating analyses of this large pan-African clade of Annonaceae unravels an interesting pattern of diversification for rain forest restricted trees co-occurring in West/Central and East African rain forests. Our results suggest that repeated reconnections between the West/Central and East African rain forest blocks allowed for biotic exchange while the break-ups induced speciation via vicariance, enhancing the levels of endemicity. These results provide an explanation for present day distribution patterns and origins of endemicity for African rain forest trees. Moreover, given the pre-Pleistocene origins of all the studied endemic East African genera and species, these results also offer important insights for setting conservation priorities in these highly diversified but threatened ecosystems.
热带雨林是地球上生物多样性最为丰富的陆地生态系统。这种多样性是如何演化的,在很大程度上仍未得到解释。在非洲,雨林分布于两个地理上相互隔离的区域:中西部几内亚-刚果地区以及东非的沿海和山区。这些区域在植物区系上彼此具有很强的亲缘关系,这表明它们曾通过始新世泛非雨林相连接。据推测,在这两个区域观察到的高特有性水平是以下两种情况之一的结果:1)一次分裂后长期隔离;2)自渐新世以来多次分裂和重新连接。为了验证这些假设,我们研究了番荔枝科植物中一个局限于非洲雨林分支的特有类群的进化历史。利用贝叶斯松弛不相关分子钟假设估计分子系统发育和分歧时间,该假设考虑了校准和系统发育的不确定性。
我们的结果提供了强有力的证据,表明番荔枝科的东非特有分支有多个起源,其时间可追溯到渐新世和中新世的显著不同时期。此外,这些连续的起源(约3300万、1600万和800万年——百万年)与非洲已知的干旱化和地质活动时期相吻合,这些活动会反复将几内亚-刚果雨林与东非雨林隔离开来。所有东非类群都被发现是在更新世之前分化的。
对这个大型泛非番荔枝科分支进行的分子系统发育年代分析揭示了在西非/中非和东非雨林中共存的局限于雨林的树木有趣的多样化模式。我们的结果表明,西非/中非和东非雨林板块之间的反复重新连接允许生物交换,而分裂则通过地理隔离导致物种形成,从而提高了特有性水平。这些结果为非洲雨林树木目前的分布模式和特有性起源提供了解释。此外,鉴于所有研究的东非特有属和物种均起源于更新世之前,这些结果也为在这些高度多样化但受到威胁的生态系统中确定保护重点提供了重要见解。