Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 06511, U.S.A.
Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, 4811, Australia.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2017 Nov;92(4):2112-2130. doi: 10.1111/brv.12323. Epub 2017 Feb 23.
The largest marine biodiversity hotspot straddles the Indian and Pacific Oceans, driven by taxa associated with tropical coral reefs. Centred on the Indo-Australian Archipelago (IAA), this biodiversity hotspot forms the 'bullseye' of a steep gradient in species richness from this centre to the periphery of the vast Indo-Pacific region. Complex patterns of endemism, wide-ranging species and assemblage differences have obscured our understanding of the genesis of this biodiversity pattern and its maintenance across two-thirds of the world's oceans. But time-calibrated molecular phylogenies coupled with ancestral biogeographic estimates have provided a valuable framework in which to examine the origins of coral reef fish biodiversity across the tropics. Herein, we examine phylogenetic and biogeographic data for coral reef fishes to highlight temporal patterns of marine endemism and tropical provinciality. The ages and distribution of endemic lineages have often been used to identify areas of species creation and demise in the marine tropics and discriminate among multiple hypotheses regarding the origins of biodiversity in the IAA. Despite a general under-sampling of endemic fishes in phylogenetic studies, the majority of locations today contain a mixture of potential paleo- and neo-endemic fishes, pointing to multiple historical processes involved in the origin and maintenance of the IAA biodiversity hotspot. Increased precision and sampling of geographic ranges for reef fishes has permitted the division of discrete realms, regions and provinces across the tropics. Yet, such metrics are only beginning to integrate phylogenetic relatedness and ancestral biogeography. Here, we integrate phylogenetic diversity with ancestral biogeographic estimation of lineages to show how assemblage structure and tropical provinciality has changed through time.
最大的海洋生物多样性热点横跨印度洋和太平洋,由与热带珊瑚礁相关的分类群驱动。这个生物多样性热点以印度-澳大利亚群岛(IAA)为中心,形成了从这个中心到广阔的印度-太平洋地区边缘物种丰富度急剧梯度的“靶心”。特有种、广泛分布的物种和组合差异的复杂模式,掩盖了我们对这种生物多样性模式的起源及其在世界海洋三分之二地区的维持的理解。但是,经过时间校准的分子系统发育关系和祖先生物地理估计为我们提供了一个有价值的框架,可用于研究热带地区珊瑚礁鱼类生物多样性的起源。在此,我们检查了珊瑚礁鱼类的系统发育和生物地理数据,以突出海洋特有种和热带特有性的时间模式。特有谱系的年龄和分布通常用于确定热带海洋中物种形成和灭绝的区域,并区分关于 IAA 生物多样性起源的多种假说。尽管在系统发育研究中对特有鱼类的采样普遍不足,但今天的大多数地点都包含潜在的古和新特有鱼类的混合物,这表明在 IAA 生物多样性热点的起源和维持中涉及多个历史过程。对珊瑚鱼的地理分布范围进行更精确和更广泛的采样,允许在热带地区划分离散的领域、区域和省份。然而,这些指标才刚刚开始整合系统发育关系和祖先生物地理学。在这里,我们将系统发育多样性与谱系的祖先生物地理估计相结合,以显示组合结构和热带特有性随时间的变化。