Department of Integrative Biology, 3040 Valley Life Sciences Building, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-3140, USA.
University of California Museum of Paleontology, 1101 Valley Life Sciences Building, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-4780, USA.
Nature. 2017 Mar 30;543(7647):710-713. doi: 10.1038/nature21675. Epub 2017 Mar 15.
Establishing the relationship between rates of change in species richness and biotic and abiotic environmental change is a major goal of evolutionary biology. Although exquisite fossil and geological records provide insight in rare cases, most groups lack high-quality fossil records. Consequently, biologists typically rely on molecular phylogenies to study the diversity dynamics of clades, usually by correlating changes in diversification rate with environmental or trait shifts. However, inferences drawn from molecular phylogenies can be limited owing to the challenge of accounting for extinct species, making it difficult to accurately determine the underlying diversity dynamics that produce them. Here, using a geologically informed model of the relationship between changing island area and species richness for the Hawaiian archipelago, we infer the rates of species richness change for 14 endemic groups over their entire evolutionary histories without the need for fossil data, or molecular phylogenies. We find that these endemic clades underwent evolutionary radiations characterized by initially increasing rates of species accumulation, followed by slow-downs. In fact, for most groups on most islands, their time of evolutionary expansion has long past, and they are now undergoing previously unrecognized long-term evolutionary decline. Our results show how landscape dynamism can drive evolutionary dynamics over broad timescales, including driving species loss that is not readily detected using molecular phylogenies, or without a rich fossil record. We anticipate that examination of other clades where the relationship between environmental change and species richness change can be quantified will reveal that many other living groups have also experienced similarly complex evolutionary trajectories, including long-term and ongoing evolutionary decline.
建立物种丰富度变化率与生物和非生物环境变化之间的关系是进化生物学的主要目标。尽管精致的化石和地质记录在罕见情况下提供了深入的了解,但大多数群体缺乏高质量的化石记录。因此,生物学家通常依赖分子系统发育来研究进化枝的多样性动态,通常通过将多样化率的变化与环境或性状变化相关联来实现。然而,由于难以解释灭绝物种的挑战,从分子系统发育推断出来的结论可能会受到限制,从而难以准确确定产生它们的潜在多样性动态。在这里,我们使用夏威夷群岛岛屿面积变化与物种丰富度之间的地质信息模型,推断了 14 个特有组在其整个进化历史中的物种丰富度变化率,而无需化石数据或分子系统发育。我们发现,这些特有类群经历了进化辐射,其特征是物种积累率最初增加,随后减慢。事实上,对于大多数岛屿上的大多数群体来说,它们的进化扩张时间早已过去,现在它们正在经历以前未被认识到的长期进化衰退。我们的研究结果表明,景观动态如何在广泛的时间尺度上驱动进化动态,包括驱动使用分子系统发育或没有丰富的化石记录不易检测到的物种损失。我们预计,对其他可以量化环境变化与物种丰富度变化之间关系的类群的研究将表明,许多其他现存的类群也经历了类似的复杂进化轨迹,包括长期和正在进行的进化衰退。