Cacho N Ivalú, Strauss Sharon Y
Center for Population Biology and Department of Evolution of Ecology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616
Center for Population Biology and Department of Evolution of Ecology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Oct 21;111(42):15132-7. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1409242111. Epub 2014 Sep 29.
Plant soil specialists contribute greatly to global diversity; however, the ecoevolutionary forces responsible for generating this diversity are poorly understood. We integrate molecular phylogenies with descriptive and experimental ecological data, creating a powerful framework with which to elucidate forces driving soil specialization. Hypotheses explaining edaphic specialization have historically focused on costs of adaptation to elements (e.g., nickel, calcium/magnesium) and accompanying tradeoffs in competitive ability in benign soils. We combine in situ microhabitat data for 37 streptanthoid species (Brassicaceae), soil analyses, and competition experiments with their phylogeny to reconstruct selective forces generating serpentine soil endemism, which has four to five independent origins in this group. Coupling ancestral state reconstruction with phylogenetic independent contrasts, we examine the magnitude and timing of changes in soil and habitat attributes relative to inferred shifts to serpentine. We find large changes in soil chemistry at nodes associated with soil shifts, suggesting that elemental changes occurred concomitantly with soil transitions. In contrast, the amount of bare ground surrounding plants in the field ("bareness"), which is greater in serpentine environments, is conserved across soil-type shifts. Thus, occupation of bare environments preceded shifts to serpentine, and may serve as an evolutionary precursor to harsh elemental soils and environments. In greenhouse experiments, taxa from barer environments are poorer competitors, a tradeoff that may contribute to soil endemism. The hypothesis of occupation of bare habitats as a precursor of soil specialization can be tested in other systems with a similar integrative ecophylogenetic approach, thereby providing deeper insights into this rich source of biodiversity.
植物土壤专家对全球生物多样性贡献巨大;然而,导致这种多样性产生的生态进化力量却鲜为人知。我们将分子系统发育与描述性和实验性生态数据相结合,创建了一个强大的框架来阐明驱动土壤专业化的力量。历史上,解释土壤专业化的假说主要集中在适应元素(如镍、钙/镁)的成本以及在良性土壤中伴随的竞争能力权衡上。我们结合了37种链状花科植物(十字花科)的原位微生境数据、土壤分析以及与其系统发育相关的竞争实验,以重建产生蛇纹岩土特有现象的选择力量,该现象在这一类群中有四到五个独立起源。通过将祖先状态重建与系统发育独立对比相结合,我们研究了相对于推断的向蛇纹岩转变,土壤和栖息地属性变化的幅度和时间。我们发现在与土壤转变相关的节点处土壤化学有很大变化,这表明元素变化与土壤转变同时发生。相比之下,田间植物周围的裸地面积(“裸露程度”)在蛇纹岩环境中更大,在不同土壤类型转变过程中保持不变。因此,占据裸露环境先于向蛇纹岩的转变,并且可能是恶劣元素土壤和环境的进化先驱。在温室实验中,来自更裸露环境的类群竞争能力较差,这种权衡可能导致土壤特有现象。作为土壤专业化先驱的占据裸露栖息地这一假说可以在其他系统中用类似的综合生态系统发育方法进行检验,从而为这一丰富的生物多样性来源提供更深入见解。