Álvarez-Presas M, Sánchez-Gracia A, Carbayo F, Rozas J, Riutort M
Departament de Genètica and Institut de Recerca de la Biodiversitat (IRBio), Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Laboratório de Ecologia e Evolução, Escola de Artes, Ciências e Humanidades, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
Heredity (Edinb). 2014 Jun;112(6):656-65. doi: 10.1038/hdy.2014.3. Epub 2014 Feb 19.
The relative importance of the processes that generate and maintain biodiversity is a major and controversial topic in evolutionary biology with large implications for conservation management. The Atlantic Forest of Brazil, one of the world's richest biodiversity hot spots, is severely damaged by human activities. To formulate an efficient conservation policy, a good understanding of spatial and temporal biodiversity patterns and their underlying evolutionary mechanisms is required. With this aim, we performed a comprehensive phylogeographic study using a low-dispersal organism, the land planarian species Cephaloflexa bergi (Platyhelminthes, Tricladida). Analysing multi-locus DNA sequence variation under the Approximate Bayesian Computation framework, we evaluated two scenarios proposed to explain the diversity of Southern Atlantic Forest (SAF) region. We found that most sampled localities harbour high levels of genetic diversity, with lineages sharing common ancestors that predate the Pleistocene. Remarkably, we detected the molecular hallmark of the isolation-by-distance effect and little evidence of a recent colonization of SAF localities; nevertheless, some populations might result from very recent secondary contacts. We conclude that extant SAF biodiversity originated and has been shaped by complex interactions between ancient geological events and more recent evolutionary processes, whereas Pleistocene climate changes had a minor influence in generating present-day diversity. We also demonstrate that land planarians are an advantageous biological model for making phylogeographic and, particularly, fine-scale evolutionary inferences, and propose appropriate conservation policies.
产生和维持生物多样性的过程的相对重要性是进化生物学中的一个重大且有争议的话题,对保护管理具有重大影响。巴西的大西洋森林是世界上生物多样性最丰富的热点地区之一,受到人类活动的严重破坏。为了制定有效的保护政策,需要很好地了解空间和时间上的生物多样性模式及其潜在的进化机制。出于这个目的,我们使用一种低扩散生物——陆地涡虫物种伯格头涡虫(扁形动物门,三肠目)进行了一项全面的系统地理学研究。在近似贝叶斯计算框架下分析多基因座DNA序列变异,我们评估了两种用来解释南大西洋森林(SAF)地区多样性的情景。我们发现,大多数采样地点都拥有高水平的遗传多样性,其谱系共享早更新世之前的共同祖先。值得注意的是,我们检测到了距离隔离效应的分子特征,几乎没有证据表明SAF地区近期有殖民化现象;然而,一些种群可能是最近二次接触的结果。我们得出结论,现存的SAF生物多样性起源于古代地质事件和更近期进化过程之间的复杂相互作用,并受到其塑造,而更新世气候变化对当今多样性的产生影响较小。我们还证明,陆地涡虫是进行系统地理学研究,特别是精细尺度进化推断的有利生物学模型,并提出了适当的保护政策。