Department of Botany, Gombe State University, PMB 127, Tudun Wada, Gombe, Gombe State, Nigeria.
Bolus Herbarium, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, Cape Town 7701, South Africa.
Ann Bot. 2024 May 10;133(5-6):833-850. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcae027.
The quartz fields of the Greater Cape Floristic Region (GCFR) are arid and island-like special habitats, hosting ~142 habitat-specialized plant species, of which 81 % are local endemics, characterized by a rapid turnover of species between and among sites. We use several phylogenetic community metrics: (1) to examine species diversity and phylogenetic structure within and among quartz fields; (2) to investigate whether quartz field specialists are evolutionarily drawn from local species pools, whereas the alternative hypothesis posits that there is no significant evolutionary connection between quartz field specialists and the local species pools; and (3) to determine whether there is an association between certain traits and the presence of species in quartz fields.
We sampled and developed dated phylogenies for six species-rich angiosperm families (Aizoaceae, Asteraceae, Crassulaceae, Cyperaceae, Fabaceae and Santalaceae) represented in the quartz field floras of southern Africa. Specifically, we focused on the flora of three quartz field regions in South Africa (Knersvlakte, Little Karoo and Overberg) and their surrounding species pools to address our research questions by scoring traits associated with harsh environments.
We found that the Overberg and Little Karoo had the highest level of species overlap for families Aizoaceae and Fabaceae, whereas the Knersvlakte and the Overberg had the highest species overlap for families Asteraceae, Crassulaceae and Santalaceae. Although our phylogenetic community structure and trait analyses showed no clear patterns, relatively low pairwise phylogenetic distances between specialists and their local species pools for Aizoaceae suggest that quartz species could be drawn evolutionarily from their surrounding areas. We also found that families Aizoaceae and Crassulaceae in Knersvlakte and Little Karoo were phylogenetically even.
Despite their proximity to one another within the GCFR, the studied areas differ in their species pools and the phylogenetic structure of their specialists. Our work provides further justification for increased conservation focus on these unique habitats under future scenarios of global change.
大开普植物区(GCFR)的石英地是干旱的岛屿状特殊栖息地,拥有约 142 种专门适应栖息地的植物物种,其中 81%是本地特有种,其特点是物种在各地区和地区之间的快速更替。我们使用了几种系统发育群落指标:(1)研究石英地内和之间的物种多样性和系统发育结构;(2)调查石英地专家是否是从当地物种库进化而来的,而替代假设是石英地专家与当地物种库之间没有显著的进化联系;(3)确定某些特征与物种在石英地中的存在之间是否存在关联。
我们对六个丰富的被子植物科(番杏科、菊科、景天科、莎草科、豆科和檀香科)的物种进行了采样和建立了有日期的系统发育树,这些科在南非的石英地植物群中都有代表。具体来说,我们专注于南非三个石英地地区(克尼斯纳弗拉克特、小卡鲁和奥弗伯格)及其周围的物种库,通过对与恶劣环境相关的特征进行评分来解决我们的研究问题。
我们发现,对于番杏科和豆科来说,奥弗伯格和小卡鲁的物种重叠程度最高,而对于菊科、景天科和檀香科来说,克尼斯纳弗拉克特和奥弗伯格的物种重叠程度最高。尽管我们的系统发育群落结构和特征分析没有显示出明显的模式,但番杏科的专家与它们的本地物种库之间相对较低的成对系统发育距离表明,石英物种可能是从它们的周围地区进化而来的。我们还发现,克尼斯纳弗拉克特和小卡鲁的番杏科和景天科在系统发育上是平等的。
尽管在 GCFR 内彼此相邻,但研究区域在其物种库和其专家的系统发育结构上存在差异。我们的工作为在未来全球变化情景下增加对这些独特栖息地的保护重点提供了进一步的理由。