Buerki Sven, Callmander Martin W, Bachman Steven, Moat Justin, Labat Jean-Noël, Forest Félix
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 3AB, UK
Missouri Botanical Garden, PO Box 299, St Louis, MO 63166-0299, USA Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la ville de Genève, ch. de l'Impératrice 1, 1292 Chambésy, Switzerland.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2015 Feb 19;370(1662):20140014. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2014.0014.
There is increased evidence that incorporating evolutionary history directly in conservation actions is beneficial, particularly given the likelihood that extinction is not random and that phylogenetic diversity (PD) is lost at higher rates than species diversity. This evidence is even more compelling in biodiversity hotspots, such as Madagascar, where less than 10% of the original vegetation remains. Here, we use the Leguminosae, an ecologically and economically important plant family, and a combination of phylogenetics and species distribution modelling, to assess biodiversity patterns and identify regions, coevolutionary processes and ecological factors that are important in shaping this diversity, especially during the Quaternary. We show evidence that species distribution and community PD are predicted by watershed boundaries, which enable the identification of a network of refugia and dispersal corridors that were perhaps important for maintaining community integrity during past climate change. Phylogenetically clustered communities are found in the southwest of the island at low elevation and share a suite of morphological characters (especially fruit morphology) indicative of coevolution with their main dispersers, the extinct and extant lemurs. Phylogenetically over-dispersed communities are found along the eastern coast at sea level and may have resulted from many independent dispersal events from the drier and more seasonal regions of Madagascar.
越来越多的证据表明,将进化历史直接纳入保护行动是有益的,特别是考虑到灭绝并非随机发生,且系统发育多样性(PD)的丧失速度高于物种多样性。在马达加斯加等生物多样性热点地区,这一证据更具说服力,那里原始植被留存不足10%。在此,我们以豆科植物为例,该植物科在生态和经济方面都很重要,我们结合系统发育学和物种分布模型,来评估生物多样性模式,并识别在塑造这种多样性(尤其是在第四纪期间)过程中重要的区域、协同进化过程和生态因素。我们发现,流域边界能够预测物种分布和群落系统发育多样性(PD),这有助于识别避难所和扩散走廊网络,这些在过去气候变化期间对维持群落完整性可能很重要。在岛屿西南部低海拔地区发现了系统发育聚类的群落,它们具有一系列形态特征(尤其是果实形态),表明与已灭绝和现存的狐猴等主要传播者存在协同进化关系。在海平面的东海岸发现了系统发育过度分散的群落,这可能是马达加斯加较干燥和季节性更强地区多次独立扩散事件的结果。