Bermingham E, Martin A P
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Republic of Panama.
Mol Ecol. 1998 Apr;7(4):499-517. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-294x.1998.00358.x.
Historical biogeography seeks to explain contemporary distributions of taxa in the context of intrinsic biological and extrinsic geological and climatic factors. To decipher the relative importance of biological characteristics vs. environmental conditions, it is necessary to ask whether groups of taxa with similar distributions share the same history of diversification. Because all of the taxa will have shared the same climatic and geological history, evidence of shared history across multiple species provides an estimate of the role of extrinsic factors in shaping contemporary biogeographic patterns. Similarly, differences in the records of evolutionary history across species will probably be signatures of biological differences. In this study, we focus on inferring the evolutionary history for geographical populations and closely related species representing three genera of primary freshwater fishes that are widely distributed in lower Central America (LCA) and northwestern Colombia. Analysis of mitochondrial gene trees provides the opportunity for robust tests of shared history across taxa. Moreover, because mtDNA permits inference of the temporal scale of diversification we can test hypotheses regarding the chronological development of the Isthmian corridor linking North and South America. We have focused attention on two issues. First, we show that many of the distinct populations of LCA fishes diverged in a relatively brief period of time thus limiting the phylogenetic signal available for tests of shared history. Second, our results provide reduced evidence of shared history when all drainages are included in the analysis because of inferred dispersion events that obscure the evolutionary history among drainage basins. When we restrict the analysis to areas that harbour endemic mitochondrial lineages, there is evidence of shared history across taxa. We hypothesize that there were two to three distinct waves of invasion into LCA from putative source populations in northwestern Colombia. The first probably happened in the late Miocene, prior to the final emergence of the Isthmus in the mid-Pliocene; the second was probably coincident with the rise of the Isthmus in the mid-Pliocene, and the third event occurred more recently, perhaps in the Pleistocene. In each case the geographical scale of the dispersion of lineages was progressively more limited, a pattern we attribute to the continuing development of the landscape due to orogeny and the consequent increase in the insularization of drainage basins. Thus, the fisheye view of LCA suggests a complex biogeographic history of overlaid cycles of colonization, diversification, sorting and extinction of lineages.
历史生物地理学旨在结合内在生物学因素以及外在地质和气候因素来解释生物分类群的当代分布情况。为了厘清生物学特征与环境条件的相对重要性,有必要探究具有相似分布的生物分类群是否拥有相同的多样化历史。由于所有生物分类群都经历了相同的气候和地质历史,多个物种共享历史的证据为外在因素在塑造当代生物地理格局中所起的作用提供了一种评估。同样,不同物种的进化历史记录差异可能是生物学差异的标志。在本研究中,我们专注于推断代表三种主要淡水鱼类属的地理种群及近缘物种的进化历史,这些鱼类广泛分布于中美洲中部低地(LCA)和哥伦比亚西北部。线粒体基因树分析为跨分类群共享历史的有力检验提供了机会。此外,由于线粒体DNA(mtDNA)能够推断多样化的时间尺度,我们可以检验关于连接南北美洲的地峡走廊按时间顺序发展的假说。我们关注两个问题。其一,我们发现中美洲中部低地许多独特的鱼类种群在相对较短的时间内就出现了分化,从而限制了可用于共享历史检验的系统发育信号。其二,由于推断的扩散事件模糊了流域间的进化历史,当分析中纳入所有流域时,我们的结果显示共享历史的证据减少。当我们将分析限制在拥有特有线粒体谱系的区域时,存在跨分类群共享历史的证据。我们推测,从哥伦比亚西北部假定的源种群有两到三次不同的入侵浪潮进入中美洲中部低地。第一次可能发生在中新世晚期,早于上新世中期地峡的最终形成;第二次可能与上新世中期地峡的隆起同时发生,第三次事件发生的时间更近,或许在更新世。在每种情况下,谱系扩散的地理范围逐渐变得更有限,我们将这种模式归因于造山运动导致的景观持续演变以及随之而来的流域岛屿化增加。因此,从中美洲中部低地的视角来看,其生物地理历史呈现出一个复杂的谱系殖民、多样化、分类和灭绝循环叠加的过程。