Departamento de Biología; Facultad de Ciencias; Universidad de Los Andes; Mérida; Venezuela.
Programa de Pos-Graduação em Biodiversidade Animal; Centro de Ciências Naturais e Exatas; Universidade Federal de Santa Maria; Rio Grande do Sul; Brazil.
Zootaxa. 2023 Jun 1;5297(2):151-188. doi: 10.11646/zootaxa.5297.2.1.
The nectar-feeding bats of the genus Anoura are widely distributed in the Neotropics, but are most speciose in the Andes. Anoura cultrata is a rare mid-elevation bat occurring in South and Central America. It is thought to be one of the few bat species exemplifying a latitudinal cline in body size. We address three systematic and biogeographic questions: 1) is the geographic variation in A. cultrata continuous, as argued to justify its current monotypic status? 2) do ecogeographic barriers to dispersal affect such variation? and 3) how do the genetic divergence and biogeography of the species compare to those of other members of the genus? To answer these questions, we used morphometric analyses, ecological niche modeling, and DNA barcoding. We divided the samples of A. cultrata into six geographic groups, delimited by topographic depressions separating mountain systems. We did not find significant correlations between body size and the geographic coordinates within five groups. Therefore, we conclude that ecogeographic barriers to dispersal between the regions occupied by such groups influenced morphometric variation in A. cultrata, and that despite its general north to south reduction in body size, the species does not show continuous clinal variation. A recent phylogenetic study of the genus Anoura concluded that it contains seven valid species. Our DNA barcoding analysis and morphological examination indicated that at least 10 species should be recognized, including A. peruana distinct from A. geoffroyi, and A. aequatoris and A. luismanueli distinct from A. caudifer. Moreover, we show that Central and South American populations of A. cultrata differ from each other at least at the subspecific level, thus we respectively refer to them as A. cultrata cultrata and as A. c. brevirostrum. Similarly, we refer to Central American and Mexican populations of 'A. geoffroyi' as A. peruana lasiopyga, and to their South American counterparts as A. p. peruana. The range of the latter subspecies reaches northeastern Venezuela. The Andes from southern Colombia to northern Peru appear to be the ancestral range of the genus.
吸蜜蝠属的花蜜蝙蝠广泛分布于新热带地区,但在安第斯山脉最为多样。安氏吸蜜蝠是一种罕见的中海拔蝙蝠,分布于南美洲和中美洲。它被认为是少数几种体型呈纬度渐变的蝙蝠物种之一。我们解决了三个系统学和生物地理学问题:1)安氏吸蜜蝠的地理变异是否连续,就像为证明其当前单型地位而提出的那样?2)扩散的生态地理障碍是否会影响这种变异?3)该物种的遗传分化和生物地理学与属内其他成员的相比如何?为了回答这些问题,我们使用了形态计量分析、生态位模型和 DNA 条形码。我们将安氏吸蜜蝠的样本分为六个地理组,由分隔山脉系统的地形洼地界定。我们没有发现五个组内的体型与地理坐标之间存在显著相关性。因此,我们得出结论,阻碍这些组之间扩散的生态地理障碍影响了安氏吸蜜蝠的形态变异,而且尽管该物种的体型从北到南普遍缩小,但它并没有表现出连续的渐变变异。最近对安氏吸蜜蝠属的系统发育研究得出结论,该属包含七个有效物种。我们的 DNA 条形码分析和形态检查表明,至少应该识别出 10 个物种,包括与 A. geoffroyi 不同的 A. peruana,以及与 A. aequatoris 和 A. luismanueli 不同的 A. caudifer。此外,我们表明,安氏吸蜜蝠的中美洲和南美洲种群至少在亚种水平上彼此不同,因此我们分别将它们称为 A. cultrata cultrata 和 A. c. brevirostrum。同样,我们将“ A. geoffroyi”的中美洲和墨西哥种群称为 A. peruana lasiopyga,将其南美洲种群称为 A. p. peruana。后者的亚种分布范围延伸到委内瑞拉东北部。从哥伦比亚南部到秘鲁北部的安第斯山脉似乎是该属的原始分布范围。