Department of Biology, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602, USA; Monte L. Bean Museum, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602, USA.
Department of Entomology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2024 Dec;201:108212. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108212. Epub 2024 Oct 9.
The northern North American Cordillera is a globally significant center of endemism. In western North America, imperiled arid steppe habitats support a number of unique species, including several endemic lichens. However, processes driving diversification and endemism in this region remain unclear. In this study, we investigate diversity and phylogeography of the threatened wanderlust lichens (mycobiont = Rhizoplaca species) which occur unattached on calcareous soils in steppe habitats. Wanderlust lichens comprise three species of lichen-forming fungi (LFF) - Rhizoplaca arbuscula, R. haydenii, and R. idahoensis (endangered, IUCN Red List) - which occur in fragmented populations in Idaho and Wyoming, with more limited populations in southern Montana and northern Utah. These lichens reproduce almost exclusively via large, asexual vegetative propagules. Here, our aims were to (i) assess the evolutionary origin of this group and identify phylogeographic structure, (ii) infer ancestral geographic distributions for lineages within this clade, and (iii) use species distribution modeling to better understand the distribution of contemporary populations. Using a genome-skimming approach, we generated a 19.1Mb alignment, spanning ca. half of the complete LFF genome, from specimens collected throughout the entire range of wanderlust lichens. Based on this phylogeny, we investigated phylogeographic patterns using RASP. Finally, we used MaxEnt to estimate species distribution models for R. arbuscula and R. haydenii. We inferred a highly structured topology, with clades corresponding to distinct geographic regions and morphologies collected throughout the group's distribution. We found that R. robusta, a sexually reproducing taxon, is clearly nested within the vagrant Rhizoplaca clade. Phylogeographic analyses suggest that both dispersal and vicariance played significant roles throughout the evolutionary history of the vagrant Rhizoplaca clade, with most of the dispersal events originating from the Salmon Basin in eastern Idaho - the center of diversity for this group. Despite the fact that wanderlust lichens are dispersal limited due to large, unspecialized vegetative propagules, we inferred multiple dispersal events crossing the Continental Divide. Comparing herbarium records with species distribution models suggests that wanderlust lichens don't fully occupy the areas of highest distribution probability. In fact, documented records often occur in areas predicted to be only marginally suitable. These data suggest a potential mismatch between contemporary habitats outside of the center of diversity in eastern Idaho with the most suitable habitat, adding to the vulnerability of this imperiled complex of endemic lichens.
北美北部科迪勒拉山脉是一个具有全球重要意义的特有中心。在北美西部,受到威胁的干旱草原生境支持着许多独特的物种,包括几种特有地衣。然而,该地区物种形成和特有现象的驱动过程仍不清楚。在这项研究中,我们调查了在草原生境的钙质土壤上无附着物的受威胁流浪地衣(共生菌= Rhizoplaca 物种)的多样性和系统地理学。流浪地衣包括三种地衣形成真菌(LFF)- Rhizoplaca arbuscula、R. haydenii 和 R. idahoensis(濒危,IUCN 红色名录)- 它们以爱达荷州和怀俄明州的分散种群存在,在蒙大拿州南部和犹他州北部的种群更为有限。这些地衣几乎完全通过大型、无性营养繁殖体进行繁殖。在这里,我们的目标是:(i) 评估该群体的进化起源并确定系统地理学结构,(ii) 推断该分支内谱系的祖先地理分布,(iii) 使用物种分布模型更好地了解当代种群的分布。我们使用基因组掠过方法,从流浪地衣分布区的整个范围内收集的标本中生成了一个 19.1Mb 的比对,覆盖了大约一半的完整 LFF 基因组。基于这个系统发育,我们使用 RASP 研究了系统地理学模式。最后,我们使用 MaxEnt 为 R. arbuscula 和 R. haydenii 估计了物种分布模型。我们推断出一个高度结构化的拓扑结构,其中分支与整个分布区的不同地理区域和形态相对应。我们发现,有性繁殖的分类群 R. robusta 明显嵌套在流浪的 Rhizoplaca 分支内。系统地理学分析表明,扩散和地理隔离在流浪的 Rhizoplaca 分支的整个进化历史中都发挥了重要作用,大多数扩散事件都起源于爱达荷州东部的鲑鱼盆地-该群体的多样性中心。尽管流浪地衣由于大型、非特化的营养繁殖体而受到扩散限制,但我们推断出多次跨越大陆分水岭的扩散事件。将标本记录与物种分布模型进行比较表明,流浪地衣并没有完全占据分布概率最高的地区。事实上,记录的标本通常出现在预测只有边缘适宜的地区。这些数据表明,在爱达荷州东部多样性中心以外的当代栖息地与最适宜的栖息地之间可能存在不匹配,这增加了这种濒危特有地衣复合体的脆弱性。