Guzmán Noelia Verónica, Pietrokovsky Silvia Mónica, Cigliano Maria Marta, Confalonieri Viviana Andrea
Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires y Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Tecnológicas, Instituto de Ecología, Genética y Evolución (IEGEBA), Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Tecnológicas, Museo de La Plata, Universidad Nacional de la Plata, Centro de Estudios Parasitológicos y de Vectores (CEPAVE), La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
PeerJ. 2017 Sep 29;5:e3835. doi: 10.7717/peerj.3835. eCollection 2017.
The Andean Mountain range has been recognized as one of the biodiversity hotspots of the world. The proposed mechanisms for such species diversification, among others, are due to the elevation processes occurring during the Miocene and the intensive glacial action during the Pleistocene. In this study we investigated the diversification history of the grasshopper species complex which shows a particularly wide latitudinal and altitudinal distribution range across the northern, central and southern Andes in South America. Many genetic lineages of this complex have been so far discovered, making it an excellent model to investigate the role of the central Andes Mountains together with climatic fluctuations as drivers of speciation. Phylogenetics, biogeographic and molecular clock analyses using a multi-locus dataset revealed that in Peru there are at least two, and possibly four genetic lineages. Two different stocks originated from a common ancestor from North/Central America-would have dispersed toward southern latitudes favored by the closure of the Panama Isthmus giving rise to two lineages, the coastal and mountain lineages, which still coexist in Peru (i.e., and ). Subsequent vicariant and dispersal events continued the differentiation process, giving rise to three to six genetic lineages (i.e., clades) detected in this study, which were geographically restricted to locations dispersed over the central Andes Mountains in South America. Our results provide another interesting example of "island diversification" motored by the topography plus unstable climatic conditions during the Pleistocene, pointing out the presence of a hotspot of diversification in the Andean region of Peru.
安第斯山脉被公认为世界生物多样性热点地区之一。造成这种物种多样化的机制,除其他外,归因于中新世期间发生的隆升过程以及更新世期间强烈的冰川作用。在本研究中,我们调查了蝗虫物种复合体的多样化历史,该复合体在南美洲安第斯山脉的北部、中部和南部呈现出特别广泛的纬度和海拔分布范围。到目前为止,已经发现了该复合体的许多遗传谱系,使其成为研究安第斯山脉中部以及气候波动作为物种形成驱动力的绝佳模型。使用多基因座数据集进行的系统发育、生物地理和分子钟分析表明,在秘鲁至少有两个,可能有四个遗传谱系。两个不同的种群起源于北美洲/中美洲的一个共同祖先,随着巴拿马地峡的关闭,它们向更南的纬度扩散,产生了两个谱系,即沿海谱系和山地谱系,它们至今仍共存于秘鲁(即 和 )。随后的替代和扩散事件继续了分化过程,产生了本研究中检测到的三到六个遗传谱系(即分支),这些谱系在地理上局限于南美洲安第斯山脉中部分散的地点。我们的结果提供了另一个有趣的例子,即由更新世期间的地形加上不稳定的气候条件驱动的“岛屿多样化”,指出了秘鲁安第斯地区存在一个多样化热点。