Departamento de Genética e Biologia Evolutiva, Universidade de São Paulo, Rua do Matão, 277, Cidade Universitária, São Paulo, SP 05508-090, Brazil; Department of Ornithology, American Museum of Natural History, NY 10024, USA.
Department of Ornithology, American Museum of Natural History, NY 10024, USA.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2020 Jul;148:106812. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2020.106812. Epub 2020 Apr 4.
Montane organisms responded to Quaternary climate change by tracking suitable habitat along elevational gradients. However, it is unclear whether these past climatic dynamics generated predictable patterns of genetic diversity in co-occurring montane taxa. To test if the genetic variation is associated with historical changes in the elevational distribution of montane habitats, we integrated paleoclimatic data and a model selection approach for testing the demographic history of five co-distributed bird species occurring in the southern Atlantic Forest sky islands. We found that changes in historical population sizes and current genetic diversity are attributable to habitat dynamics among time periods and the current elevational distribution of populations. Taxa with populations restricted to the more climatically dynamic southern mountain block (SMB) had, on average, a six-fold demographic expansion, whereas the populations from the northern mountain block (NMB) remained constant. In the current configuration of the southern Atlantic Forest montane habitats, populations in the SMB have more widespread elevational distributions, occur at lower elevations, and harbor higher levels of genetic diversity than NMB populations. Despite the apparent coupling of demographic and climatic oscillations, our data rejected simultaneous population structuring due to historical habitat fragmentation. Demographic modeling indicated that the species had different modes of differentiation, and varied in the timing of divergence and the degree of gene flow across mountain blocks. Our results suggest that the heterogeneous distribution of genetic variation in birds of the Atlantic Forest sky islands is associated with the interplay between topography and climate of distinct mountains, leading to predictable patterns of genetic diversity.
山地生物通过沿着海拔梯度追踪适宜的栖息地来应对第四纪气候变化。然而,目前尚不清楚这些过去的气候动态是否在共存的山地分类群中产生了可预测的遗传多样性模式。为了检验遗传变异是否与山地生境海拔分布的历史变化有关,我们整合了古气候数据和模型选择方法,以检验发生在南大西洋森林天空岛的五种共现鸟类物种的种群历史。我们发现,历史种群规模的变化和当前遗传多样性与不同时期的生境动态以及当前种群的海拔分布有关。与人口局限于更具气候动态的南山地块(SMB)的分类群相比,人口平均经历了六倍的种群扩张,而来自北山地块(NMB)的人口则保持不变。在当前南大西洋森林山地生境的配置中,SMB 的种群具有更广泛的海拔分布,出现在较低的海拔,并且比 NMB 的种群具有更高水平的遗传多样性。尽管人口和气候波动明显耦合,但我们的数据拒绝了由于历史生境破碎化而同时发生的种群结构。人口统计建模表明,这些物种具有不同的分化模式,在分化的时间和跨越山地块的基因流程度上有所不同。我们的结果表明,大西洋森林天空岛鸟类中遗传变异的不均匀分布与不同山脉的地形和气候相互作用有关,导致了可预测的遗传多样性模式。