Title
The evolutionary assembly of forest communities along environmental gradients: recent diversification or sorting of pre-adapted clades?
Date Issued
2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Linan A.G.
Myers J.A.
Edwards C.E.
Zanne A.E.
Smith S.A.
Arellano G.
Cayola L.
Fuentes A.F.
García-Cabrera K.
González-Caro S.
Loza M.I.
Macía M.J.
Malhi Y.
Nieto-Ariza B.
Silman M.
Tello J.S.
Washington University in St Louis
Publisher(s)
John Wiley and Sons Inc
Abstract
Recent studies have demonstrated that ecological processes that shape community structure and dynamics change along environmental gradients. However, much less is known about how the emergence of the gradients themselves shape the evolution of species that underlie community assembly. In this study, we address how the creation of novel environments leads to community assembly via two nonmutually exclusive processes: immigration and ecological sorting of pre-adapted clades (ISPC), and recent adaptive diversification (RAD). We study these processes in the context of the elevational gradient created by the uplift of the Central Andes. We develop a novel approach and method based on the decomposition of species turnover into within- and among-clade components, where clades correspond to lineages that originated before mountain uplift. Effects of ISPC and RAD can be inferred from how components of turnover change with elevation. We test our approach using data from over 500 Andean forest plots. We found that species turnover between communities at different elevations is dominated by the replacement of clades that originated before the uplift of the Central Andes. Our results suggest that immigration and sorting of clades pre-adapted to montane habitats is the primary mechanism shaping tree communities across elevations.
Start page
2506
End page
2519
Volume
232
Issue
6
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Forestal Ciencias del medio ambiente
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85113923214
PubMed ID
Source
New Phytologist
ISSN of the container
0028646X
Sponsor(s)
We thank the Dirección General de Biodiversidad, the Bolivian Park Service (SERNAP), the Madidi National Park and local communities for permits, access and collaboration in Bolivia, where fieldwork was supported by the National Science Foundation (DEB 0101775, DEB 0743457, DEB 1836353). Additional financial support to the Madidi Project was provided by the Missouri Botanical Garden, the National Geographic Society (NGS 7754‐04 and NGS 8047‐06), International Center for Advanced Renewable Energy and Sustainability (I‐CARES) at Washington University in St. Louis, the Comunidad de Madrid (Spain), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (Spain), Centro de Estudios de América Latina (Banco Santander and Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain), and the Taylor and Davidson families. Fieldwork in the ABERG transect was supported by NSF, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and the UK Natural Environment Research Council. This work was developed in part during the working group ‘A Synthesis of Patterns and Mechanisms of Diversity and Forest Change in the Andes’ funded by the Living Earth Collaborative at Washington University in St. Louis. We thank all the researchers, students and local guides who were involved in the collection of the data, particularly Carla Maldonado, Maritza Cornejo, Alejandro Araujo, Javier Quisbert, Narel Paniagua and Peter Jørgenson. Finally, we thank Iván Jiménez for helpful discussions, ideas and comments.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus