Lawing A Michelle, Polly P David, Hews Diana K, Martins Emília P
Am Nat. 2016 Aug;188(2):133-48. doi: 10.1086/687202. Epub 2016 Jun 8.
Fossils and other paleontological information can improve phylogenetic comparative method estimates of phenotypic evolution and generate hypotheses related to species diversification. Here, we use fossil information to calibrate ancestral reconstructions of suitable climate for Sceloporus lizards in North America. Integrating data from the fossil record, general circulation models of paleoclimate during the Miocene, climate envelope modeling, and phylogenetic comparative methods provides a geographically and temporally explicit species distribution model of Sceloporus-suitable habitat through time. We provide evidence to support the historic biogeographic hypothesis of Sceloporus diversification in warm North American deserts and suggest a relatively recent Sceloporus invasion into Mexico around 6 Ma. We use a physiological model to map extinction risk. We suggest that the number of hours of restriction to a thermal refuge limited Sceloporus from inhabiting Mexico until the climate cooled enough to provide suitable habitat at approximately 6 Ma. If the future climate returns to the hotter climates of the past, Mexico, the place of highest modern Sceloporus richness, will no longer provide suitable habitats for Sceloporus to survive and reproduce.
化石及其他古生物学信息能够改进系统发育比较方法对表型进化的估计,并生成与物种多样化相关的假说。在此,我们利用化石信息来校准北美鞭尾蜥适宜气候的祖先重建。整合来自化石记录、中新世古气候的通用环流模型、气候包络模型以及系统发育比较方法的数据,可提供一个随时间推移在地理和时间上明确的鞭尾蜥适宜栖息地物种分布模型。我们提供证据支持了鞭尾蜥在温暖的北美沙漠中多样化的历史生物地理学假说,并表明鞭尾蜥在约600万年前相对较新地侵入了墨西哥。我们使用一个生理模型来绘制灭绝风险图。我们认为,对热避难所的限制时长使得鞭尾蜥直到气候冷却到大约600万年前能够提供适宜栖息地时才得以栖息于墨西哥。如果未来气候恢复到过去更炎热的气候,现代鞭尾蜥丰富度最高的墨西哥将不再为鞭尾蜥的生存和繁殖提供适宜栖息地。