Pós-Graduação, Departamento Genética, FMRP, Universidade de São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil.
Departamento de Biologia, FFCLRP, Universidade de São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes, Bairro Monte Alegre, Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil.
J Hered. 2019 Jan 7;110(1):22-33. doi: 10.1093/jhered/esy042.
Biodiversity is the result of historical and recurrent events acting on populations and species. The Drosophila buzzatii species cluster is distributed along a diagonal of open areas in South America. Combining genetic analyses with species distribution models we evaluated the influence of climatic changes in the demography history of this cluster. We performed a Bayesian Skyline analysis and reconstructed the ancestral areas based on mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (mtCOI) gene. We modeled the current distribution and projected it to past (mid-Holocene and Last Glacial Maximum) and future. Our results demonstrate that climate change plays a critical role in historical demography and in defining the current and future geographic ranges of these species. The inter-Andean dry valleys and the Chiquitano Seasonally Dry Tropical Forests (SDTF) in Bolivia are considered the ancestral area for the D. buzzatii cluster. From this area, the migration route was through a west-east corridor from central Andes, throughout Bolivia, Paraguay and Argentina toward eastern and northeastern Brazil, along the edges of rain forest. The responses of the species to the climatic changes differ from the dominant assumptions of expansion during dry/cold weather and contraction during wet/warm weather that characterized the glacial cycles. We suggest that the influence of ecology and the potential responsiveness of each taxon to the environmental dynamics should be considered as well. Predictions for the future suggest a decline of suitable areas for the cluster, threatening biodiversity of these habitats. This work showed the importance of an integrative analysis of genetics and geography information to improve the inferences about demographic history hypotheses for the cluster.
生物多样性是历史和反复发生的事件对种群和物种作用的结果。果蝇 buzzatii 物种群沿南美洲开阔地区的对角线分布。我们结合遗传分析和物种分布模型,评估了气候变化对该物种群历史人口动态的影响。我们进行了贝叶斯天空线分析,并根据线粒体细胞色素氧化酶 I(mtCOI)基因重建了祖先区域。我们模拟了当前的分布,并将其投影到过去(中全新世和末次冰期最大值)和未来。我们的结果表明,气候变化在历史人口动态和定义这些物种的当前和未来地理范围方面起着关键作用。安第斯山脉之间的干旱谷和玻利维亚的 Chiquitano 季节性干燥热带森林(SDTF)被认为是 D. buzzatii 聚类的祖居地。从这个地区,迁徙路线是通过从中部安第斯山脉,穿过玻利维亚、巴拉圭和阿根廷到巴西东部和东北部的东西走廊,沿着雨林边缘。物种对气候变化的反应与主导假设不同,即在干旱/寒冷天气扩张,在潮湿/温暖天气收缩,这是冰川循环的特征。我们建议,应该考虑生态学的影响以及每个分类群对环境动态的潜在响应。对未来的预测表明,该聚类的适宜区域将会减少,威胁到这些栖息地的生物多样性。这项工作表明,遗传和地理信息综合分析对于改进对聚类的人口历史假设的推断非常重要。