Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Departamento de Ecologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade de São Paulo-USP , São Paulo, State of São Paulo, Brazil.
Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Winterthurerstrasse 190 , Zurich CH-8057, Switzerland.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2024 Jul 29;379(1907):20230133. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2023.0133. Epub 2024 Jun 24.
Mutualistic interactions are key to sustaining Earth's biodiversity. Yet, we are only beginning to understand how coevolution in mutualistic assemblages can shape the distribution and persistence of species across landscapes. Here, we combine the geographic mosaic theory of coevolution with metacommunity dynamics to understand how geographically structured selection can shape patterns of richness, dispersal, extinction and persistence of mutualistic species. In this model, species may experience strong or weak reciprocal selection imposed by mutualisms within each patch (i.e. hotspots and coldspots, respectively). Using numerical simulations, we show that mutualistic coevolution leads to a concentration of species richness at hotspots. Such an effect occurs because hotspots sustain higher rates of colonization and lower rates of extinction than coldspots, whether the environment changes or not. Importantly, under environmental changes, coldspots fail to sustain a positive colonization-to-extinction balance. Rather, species persistence within coldspots relies on hotspots acting as biodiversity sources and enhancing population dispersal across the landscape. In fact, even a few hotspots in the landscape can fuel the spatial network of dispersal of populations in the metacommunity. Our study highlights that coevolutionary hotspots can act as biodiversity sources, favouring colonization and allowing species to expand their distribution across landscapes even in changing environments. This article is part of the theme issue 'Diversity-dependence of dispersal: interspecific interactions determine spatial dynamics'.
互利共生相互作用是维持地球生物多样性的关键。然而,我们才刚刚开始了解共同进化在互利共生组合中如何塑造物种在景观中的分布和持久性。在这里,我们将共同进化的地理镶嵌理论与集合群落动态学结合起来,以了解地理结构选择如何塑造互利共生物种丰富度、扩散、灭绝和持久性的模式。在这个模型中,物种可能会在每个斑块内经历由互利共生关系施加的强烈或弱互惠选择(即热点和冷点)。通过数值模拟,我们表明互利共生的共同进化导致了物种丰富度在热点处的集中。这种效应的发生是因为无论环境是否变化,热点都能维持更高的定居率和更低的灭绝率。重要的是,在环境变化下,冷点无法维持正的定居-灭绝平衡。相反,冷点内物种的持续存在依赖于热点作为生物多样性的来源,并增强了种群在景观中的扩散。事实上,即使在景观中有几个热点也可以为集合群落中的种群扩散的空间网络提供动力。我们的研究强调了共同进化热点可以作为生物多样性的来源,有利于定居,并允许物种在不断变化的环境中扩展其在景观中的分布。本文是主题为“扩散的多样性依赖性:种间相互作用决定空间动态”的一部分。