Prates Ivan, Xue Alexander T, Brown Jason L, Alvarado-Serrano Diego F, Rodrigues Miguel T, Hickerson Michael J, Carnaval Ana C
Department of Biology, City College of New York, New York, NY 10031; Department of Biology, Graduate Center, City University of New York, New York, NY 10016;
Department of Biology, City College of New York, New York, NY 10031; Cooperative Wildlife Research Laboratory, Department of Zoology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Jul 19;113(29):7978-85. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1601063113.
We apply a comparative framework to test for concerted demographic changes in response to climate shifts in the neotropical lowland forests, learning from the past to inform projections of the future. Using reduced genomic (SNP) data from three lizard species codistributed in Amazonia and the Atlantic Forest (Anolis punctatus, Anolis ortonii, and Polychrus marmoratus), we first reconstruct former population history and test for assemblage-level responses to cycles of moisture transport recently implicated in changes of forest distribution during the Late Quaternary. We find support for population shifts within the time frame of inferred precipitation fluctuations (the last 250,000 y) but detect idiosyncratic responses across species and uniformity of within-species responses across forest regions. These results are incongruent with expectations of concerted population expansion in response to increased rainfall and fail to detect out-of-phase demographic syndromes (expansions vs. contractions) across forest regions. Using reduced genomic data to infer species-specific demographical parameters, we then model the plausible spatial distribution of genetic diversity in the Atlantic Forest into future climates (2080) under a medium carbon emission trajectory. The models forecast very distinct trajectories for the lizard species, reflecting unique estimated population densities and dispersal abilities. Ecological and demographic constraints seemingly lead to distinct and asynchronous responses to climatic regimes in the tropics, even among similarly distributed taxa. Incorporating such constraints is key to improve modeling of the distribution of biodiversity in the past and future.
我们应用一个比较框架来测试新热带低地森林中对气候变化的协同人口变化,从过去吸取经验以指导未来的预测。利用分布在亚马逊地区和大西洋森林中的三种蜥蜴物种(斑点安乐蜥、奥氏安乐蜥和斑纹多鳞蜥)的简化基因组(SNP)数据,我们首先重建过去的种群历史,并测试对最近与晚第四纪森林分布变化相关的水分输送周期的组合水平响应。我们发现在推断的降水波动时间框架内(过去25万年)存在种群转移的证据,但检测到物种间的特异响应以及物种在不同森林区域内响应的一致性。这些结果与预期的因降雨增加而导致的协同种群扩张不一致,并且未能检测到不同森林区域间异相的人口统计学综合征(扩张与收缩)。利用简化基因组数据推断物种特异性的人口统计学参数,然后我们在中等碳排放轨迹下模拟大西洋森林中遗传多样性在未来气候(2080年)下的可能空间分布。模型预测这三种蜥蜴物种的轨迹非常不同,反映出独特的估计种群密度和扩散能力。生态和人口统计学限制似乎导致热带地区对气候状况有不同且异步的响应,即使是在分布相似的分类群中也是如此。纳入这些限制是改善过去和未来生物多样性分布建模的关键。