Economo Evan P, Klimov Pavel, Sarnat Eli M, Guénard Benoit, Weiser Michael D, Lecroq Beatrice, Knowles L Lacey
Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University, 1919-1 Tancha, Onna-son 904-0495, Japan Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, 830 N University Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48701, USA
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, 830 N University Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48701, USA Tyumen State University, 10 Semakova St., Tyumen 625003, Russian Federation.
Proc Biol Sci. 2015 Jan 7;282(1798):20141416. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2014.1416.
Adaptive radiations are of particular interest owing to what they reveal about the ecological and evolutionary regulation of biodiversity. This applies to localized island radiations such as Darwin's finches, and also to rapid radiations occurring on a global scale. Here we analyse the macroevolution and macroecology of Pheidole, a famously hyperdiverse and ecologically dominant ant genus. We generate and analyse four novel datasets: (i) a robust global phylogeny including 285 Pheidole species, (ii) a global database on regional Pheidole richness in 365 political areas summarizing over 97 000 individual records from more than 6500 studies, (iii) a global database of Pheidole richness from 3796 local communities and (iv) a database of Pheidole body sizes across species. Analysis of the potential climate drivers of richness revealed that the patterns are statistically very similar across different biogeographic regions, with both regional and local richness associated with the same coefficients of temperature and precipitation. This similarity occurs even though phylogenetic analysis shows that Pheidole reached dominance in communities through serial localized radiations into different biomes within different continents and islands. Pheidole body size distributions have likewise converged across geographical regions. We propose these cases of convergence indicate that the global radiation of Pheidole is structured by deterministic factors regulating diversification and diversity.
适应性辐射因其揭示了生物多样性的生态和进化调控而备受关注。这适用于局部岛屿辐射,如达尔文雀,也适用于全球范围内发生的快速辐射。在这里,我们分析了大头蚁属(Pheidole)的宏观进化和宏观生态学,这是一个以高度多样化和生态优势著称的蚂蚁属。我们生成并分析了四个新的数据集:(i)一个包含285种大头蚁的稳健全球系统发育树;(ii)一个关于365个政治区域内大头蚁区域丰富度的全球数据库,汇总了来自6500多项研究的97000多条个体记录;(iii)一个来自3796个当地群落的大头蚁丰富度全球数据库;(iv)一个跨物种的大头蚁体型数据库。对丰富度潜在气候驱动因素的分析表明,不同生物地理区域的模式在统计上非常相似,区域和局部丰富度都与相同的温度和降水系数相关。尽管系统发育分析表明,大头蚁通过在不同大陆和岛屿内的不同生物群落中进行一系列局部辐射而在群落中占据主导地位,但这种相似性依然存在。大头蚁的体型分布在地理区域上也同样趋同。我们认为,这些趋同案例表明,大头蚁的全球辐射是由调节多样化和多样性的确定性因素构建的。