Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota, 1479 Gortner Avenue, St. Paul, MN, 55108, USA.
Department of Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, 1479 Gortner Ave, St. Paul, MN, 55108, USA.
Am J Bot. 2018 Mar;105(3):565-586. doi: 10.1002/ajb2.1049. Epub 2018 Apr 24.
Evolutionary and biogeographic history, including past environmental change and diversification processes, are likely to have influenced the expansion, migration, and extinction of populations, creating evolutionary legacy effects that influence regional species pools and the composition of communities. We consider the consequences of the diversification process in shaping trait evolution and assembly of oak-dominated communities throughout the continental United States (U.S.).
Within the U.S. oaks, we tested for phylogenetic and functional trait patterns at different spatial scales, taking advantage of a dated phylogenomic analysis of American oaks and the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA).
We find (1) phylogenetic overdispersion at small grain sizes throughout the U.S. across all spatial extents and (2) a shift from overdispersion to clustering with increasing grain sizes. Leaf traits have evolved in a convergent manner, and these traits are clustered in communities at all spatial scales, except in the far west, where species with contrasting leaf types co-occur.
Our results support the hypotheses that (1) interspecific interactions were important in parallel adaptive radiation of the genus into a range of habitats across the continent and (2) that the diversification process is a critical driver of community assembly. Functional convergence of complementary species from distinct clades adapted to the same local habitats is a likely mechanism that allows distantly related species to coexist. Our findings contribute to an explanation of the long-term maintenance of high oak diversity and the dominance of the oak genus in North America.
进化和生物地理历史,包括过去的环境变化和多样化过程,可能会影响种群的扩张、迁移和灭绝,从而产生影响区域物种库和群落组成的进化遗留效应。我们考虑了多样化过程对整个美国(美国)主导栎属社区的特征演化和组合的影响。
在美国栎属中,我们在不同的空间尺度上测试了系统发育和功能特征模式,利用了美国栎属的 dated phylogenomic 分析和美国林务局(USFS)森林清查和分析(FIA)。
我们发现(1)在整个美国,所有空间范围内的小粒度都存在系统发育过度分散,(2)随着粒度的增加,从过度分散到聚类的转变。叶片特征以趋同的方式进化,这些特征在所有空间尺度的群落中都有聚类,除了在遥远的西部,那里有具有相反叶片类型的物种共存。
我们的结果支持以下假设:(1)种间相互作用在属的平行适应性辐射中很重要,进入了大陆上的一系列栖息地,(2)多样化过程是群落组装的关键驱动因素。来自不同进化枝的互补物种的功能趋同,适应于相同的局部栖息地,这可能是允许亲缘关系较远的物种共存的一种机制。我们的发现有助于解释长期维持高栎属多样性和栎属在北美的优势地位。