PremiseThe distributions of plant clades are shaped by abiotic and biotic factors as well as historical aspects such as center of origin. Dispersals between distant areas may lead to niche evolution when lineages are established in new environments. Alternatively, dispersing lineages may exhibit niche conservatism, moving between areas with similar environmental conditions. Here we test these contrasting hypotheses in the Datureae clade (Solanaceae). MethodsWe used maximum likelihood methods to estimate the ancestral range of Datureae along with the history of biogeographic events. We then characterized the niche of each taxon using climatic and soil variables and tested for shifts in environmental niche optima. Finally, we examined how these shifts relate to the niche breadth of taxa and clades within Datureae and the degree of overlap between them. ResultsDatureae originated in the Andes and subsequently expanded its range to North America and non‐Andean regions of South America. The ancestral niche, and that of mostDaturaandTrompettiaspecies, is dry, whileBrugmansiaspecies likely shifted toward a more mesic environment. Nonetheless, most Datureae present moderate to high overlap in niche breadth today. ConclusionsThe expansion of Datureae into North America was associated with niche conservatism, with dispersal into similarly dry areas as occupied by the ancestral lineage. Subsequent niche evolution, including the apparent shift to a mesic niche inBrugmansia, diversified the range of habitats occupied by species in the tribe Datureae but also led to significant niche overlap among the three genera.
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Phylogenomics and macroevolution of a florally diverse Neotropical plant clade
Abstract Hillieae is a group of ∼30 florally diverse, Neotropical epiphyte species. Species richness peaks in southern Central America and taxa display bat, hawkmoth, or hummingbird pollination syndromes. A phylogenetic framework is needed to understand floral and biogeographic evolution. We used target enrichment data to infer a species tree and a Bayesian time-calibrated tree including ∼83% of the species in the group. We inferred ancestral biogeography and pollination syndromes, described species’ realized bioclimatic niches via a principal component analysis, and estimated significant niche shifts using Ornstein–Uhlenbeck models to understand how different abiotic and biotic variables have shaped Hillieae evolution. We estimated that Hillieae originated in southern Central America 19 Ma and that hawkmoth pollination is the ancestral character state. Multiple independent shifts in pollination syndrome, biogeographic distribution, and realized bioclimatic niche have occurred, though bioclimatic niche is largely conserved. Using generalized linear models, we identify two interactions—between species’ biogeographic ranges and pollination syndromes, and between phylogenetic covariance and pollination syndromes—that additively affect the degree of bioclimatic niche overlap between species. Regional variation in pollination syndrome diversity and patterns of species bioclimatic niche overlap indicate a link between biogeography and species ecology in driving Hillieae diversification and syndrome evolution.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2055525
- PAR ID:
- 10636730
- Publisher / Repository:
- Oxford University Press
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Evolution
- Volume:
- 79
- Issue:
- 8
- ISSN:
- 0014-3820
- Format(s):
- Medium: X Size: p. 1583-1596
- Size(s):
- p. 1583-1596
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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