| Literature DB >> 30310740 |
Alexandre Antonelli1,2,3,4, María Ariza1,2,5, James Albert6, Tobias Andermann1,2, Josué Azevedo1,2, Christine Bacon1,2, Søren Faurby1,2, Thais Guedes1,2,7,8, Carina Hoorn9,10, Lúcia G Lohmann11,12, Pável Matos-Maraví1,2, Camila D Ritter1,2, Isabel Sanmartín13, Daniele Silvestro1,2,14,15, Marcelo Tejedor1,2,16, Hans Ter Steege17,18, Hanna Tuomisto19, Fernanda P Werneck20, Alexander Zizka1,2, Scott V Edwards2,4,21.
Abstract
The unparalleled biodiversity found in the American tropics (the Neotropics) has attracted the attention of naturalists for centuries. Despite major advances in recent years in our understanding of the origin and diversification of many Neotropical taxa and biotic regions, many questions remain to be answered. Additional biological and geological data are still needed, as well as methodological advances that are capable of bridging these research fields. In this review, aimed primarily at advanced students and early-career scientists, we introduce the concept of "trans-disciplinary biogeography," which refers to the integration of data from multiple areas of research in biology (e.g., community ecology, phylogeography, systematics, historical biogeography) and Earth and the physical sciences (e.g., geology, climatology, palaeontology), as a means to reconstruct the giant puzzle of Neotropical biodiversity and evolution in space and time. We caution against extrapolating results derived from the study of one or a few taxa to convey general scenarios of Neotropical evolution and landscape formation. We urge more coordination and integration of data and ideas among disciplines, transcending their traditional boundaries, as a basis for advancing tomorrow's ground-breaking research. Our review highlights the great opportunities for studying the Neotropical biota to understand the evolution of life.Entities:
Keywords: Biodiversity; Biogeography; Biotic diversification; Community ecology; Landscape evolution; Phylogenetics; Phylogeny; Phylogeography; Scale; Tropics
Year: 2018 PMID: 30310740 PMCID: PMC6174874 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.5644
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1The giant Neotropical puzzle.
Map of the Neotropical region, spanning from Central Mexico to central Argentina (red dashed line) and including all Caribbean Islands. The figure shows examples of the large diversity of Neotropical habitats and the taxa that inhabit those habitats. We also outline a few of the many topics in Neotropical biodiversity that can be studied in the “trans-disciplinary biogeographic approach” advocated here. (A) Eastern slopes of the Bolivian Andes, where the Amazonian and Andean biotas meet; (B) Patagonian mountains of southern Chile, which despite being in the temperate zone of South America is home to many Neotropical-derived lineages; (C) Iguazu waterfalls, where increased humidity create gallery forests within the South American open diagonal; (D) Southern grasslands of the Pampas, a naturally open habitat now largely influenced by human activity; (E) One of the ca. 338 known species of hummingbirds, a conspicuous clade currently restricted to the American continent and particularly diverse in the Andes; (F) Epidendrum ibaguense, a widespread species in the orchid family in which many new Neotropical species are discovered each year; (G) An unidentified fly in the inselbergs of southern French Guiana, where basaltic rocks emerge several hundred meters above the surrounding Amazonian rainforest; (H) The large dogtooth characin fish Hydrolycus scomberoides, exemplifying the world’s richest ichthyofauna in the Amazon drainage basin; (I) Ameerega flavopicta, a rock-dwelling frog species adapted to a region of high seasonality of precipitation; (J) A columnar cactus of central Mexico, near the northwestern limits of the Neotropical region where low-canopy forests and succulent vegetation build vegetation mosaics across the landscape. Map generated through the remote-sensing ESA GlobCover 2009 project and colored by biome assignments (©ESA 2010 and UCLouvain; http://due.esrin.esa.int/page_globcover.php). Photo credits: A–G, I and J: A.A.; H: J.A.
The concept of taxonomic diversity, and its use and challenges in the Neotropical context.
| Generic and family-level taxonomic ranks are occasionally used in comparative studies, especially when species identification or delimitation is difficult ( |
| Observed taxonomic diversity is sensitive to sampling effort, especially at the species rank. Since communities typically contain many species that are locally rare, observed species richness provides only an underestimate of the number of species actually present, unless the community is very thoroughly sampled. The accuracy of estimates of taxonomic diversity depends on the number of individuals sampled, the size of the local species pool, the evenness of species abundances in the community, size and environmental heterogeneity of the area, and the status of taxonomic knowledge of the groups surveyed. When comparing estimates of local taxonomic diversity among areas, it is therefore important that they are based on quantitative and standardized sampling ( |
| Beta diversity and species turnover, reflecting heterogeneity in species composition among sites, are also of interest ( |
The concept of functional diversity, and its use and challenges in the Neotropical context.
Some of the many theories proposed to explain the high levels of (Neo)tropical biodiversity.
| Theory | Key proponent(s) | Summary | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Riverine barrier hypothesis | The formation of large lowland Neotropical rivers like the Amazon resulted in genetic isolation and speciation in taxa ecophysiologically restricted to non-flooded rain forests. | Dynamic river capture is even more effective at isolating and reuniting populations than is the static geometry of dendritic river basins. | |
| Pleistocene refugium theory | Most Amazonian birds, and probably other taxa, originated recently in response to Pleistocene climate changes. The repeated contraction of forests in relation to savannas led to the isolation of populations and inability of breeding once they came into secondary contact during inter-glacials. | From initial support for plants and other taxa, this theory has been heavily criticized based on lack of geophysical evidence for savanna expansions, old divergence times from phylogenies, etc. | |
| Time-area integrated hypothesis | Diversity can be predicted by the amount of time that species spend in a region, multiplied by the total area of that region. | A modification of this model is a strong predictor of dispersal events across the Neotropics ( | |
| Phylogenetic niche conservatism | Tropical biotas are more diverse because many lineages of the modern biosphere evolved in the super-greenhouse world of the Mesozoic and early Cenozoic 140–50 Ma and remained in their original environment. | Most clades have origins in warm and wet tropical climates. Most clades at higher latitudes adapted to cold and dry conditions in the Neogene and Quaternary. | |
| Out of the Tropics | Tropical biotas are more diverse because lineages have higher speciation rates, lower extinction rates, and higher net emigration over immigration than lineages in extra-tropical regions. | This is just one popular theory among several others attempting to explain the latitudinal diversity gradient in species richness. | |
| Metabolic theory of ecology | Higher metabolic rates translate into higher rates of speciation and extinction at low latitudes. | Incompletely developed mechanistic links between kinetics at the metabolic, ecophysiological, and evolutionary scales. | |
| Tropical productivity | Species richness is positively correlated with net primary productivity because larger populations are less likely to stochastically fluctuate to a population size of zero, which is a sticky boundary. | Metanalyses have shown a unimodal relationship is more common than a monotonic between productivity and species richness ( | |
| Sea‐level fluctuations | Repeated sea-level rises during the late Cenozoic led to the allopatric speciation of Amazonian species in true islands. | Model based on current topography, lacking other geophysical evidence. | |
| Museum hypothesis | Tropical lowlands act as “museums” of diversity, in which species of different origins gradually accumulate. | The Neotropics is now considered both “museum” and “cradle” of diversity ( |
Figure 2Taxonomic sampling across the world’s tropics.
Density maps for geo-referenced species occurrences available from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility for (A) Mammals, (B) Amphibians, (C) Fishes, (D) Vascular plants between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn (23.5°S–23.5°N), showing the main spatial biases of taxonomic sampling. All datasets were cleaned for automatically detectable errors using SpeciesGeoCoder (Töpel et al., 2016). The figure is shown on a cylindrical equal area projection with standard parallels of 11.75°S and 11.75°N. The width of each cell is consistently 1°, while the height of each cell is 1° at the standard parallels, slightly lower at the equator and slightly higher at the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn. Colors indicate 10-based logarithm of the number of records.
The various components of Neotropical biodiversity, examples of major aspects known about them, and some of the key topics that remain to be understood.
| Biodiversity components | Known knowns | Known unknowns | Unknown unknowns |
|---|---|---|---|
| Taxonomic diversity | Approximate species numbers for macroscopic organisms; human impacts tend to decrease overall diversity | Large portions of biodiversity are unexplored (i.e., microbes, invertebrates, fungi) | Taxonomic units used in biodiversity studies may not represent comparable ecological or evolutionary units |
| Genetic variation (within species) | Patterns of genetic variation known for very selected taxa | Overall patterns of genetic variation | How generalizable are conclusions drawn by such limited patterns of genetic diversity |
| Phylogenetic diversity | General understanding of the tree (or network) of life | Drivers of diversification | Potential biases in phylogeny reconstruction and time-calibration |
| Spatial patterns of diversity | Hotspots and general patterns of species richness and diversity; broad species ranges for charismatic taxa | Areas of endemism; known patterns of biodiversity are biased; ecological preferences of species; drivers of diversity | Human impact to overall spatial patterns |
| Functional diversity | Large scale productivity patterns | Biotic interactions | Relevance of current functional diversity measures; equivalency in functional traits; relationship between current and future functional diversity |
The concept of phylogenetic diversity, and its use and challenges in the Neotropical context.
| Complementary to phylogenetic diversity based on the relationships among taxa, patterns of genetic variation within species also represent a vital but often under-appreciated component of biodiversity. Knowledge of intraspecific genetic variation may also improve the prediction of a species ability to adapt to changing climates, as well as improving understanding of the process of speciation. This type of information is particularly important in the light of ongoing anthropogenic climate change. However, our current knowledge of species genetic diversity is restricted to a few selected species, and overall patterns of intraspecific genetic diversity remain poorly understood. Even among well-studied groups (e.g., mammals), spatial patterns of genetic diversity are effectively unknown within the tropics. |
The commonness of rarity in Neotropical diversity.
| Most Neotropical species are rare, narrowly distributed, and endemic to particular regions or biomes (see |
| In both fish and plant taxa, areas of endemism separated by prominent biogeographic barriers, such as Amazonian and Mesoamerican rainforests currently separated by the Andes, arise from dispersal limitation, and differential environmental tolerances ( |
Figure 3The complex topography and geology of South America.
This map highlights the topographic differences across the continent, including the Precambrian and Paleozoic upland shields, and the Andean cordilleras and structural arches that uplifted during the Cretaceous and Cenozoic. The Sub-Andean foreland basin constituted the main drainage axis of South America for most of the past 100 million years, serving as the main arena of evolutionary diversification for the mega-diverse biota of lowland Amazonia. Uplift of structural arches during the Paleogene and Neogene resulted in the formation of the modern continental drainage configuration. Base map created by Paulo Petry from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission with elevations in meters. Note that the scale exaggerates differences at lower elevations. Adapted from Albert, Petry & Reis (2011).
Figure 4Heat map summarizing the current (right upper boxes) and potential (left bottom boxes) interactions across the biodiversity disciplines in the Neotropics.
The X- and Y-axes indicate the typical taxonomic and temporal scales covered by each discipline, respectively. The white text in each box provides some short examples of why the disciplines are not yet successfully integrated, and some of the key benefits that will be gained by a further integration. See text for a discussion.
Methodological challenges and advances for estimating biogeographic histories.
| Inferring the spatial and temporal dimensions of evolution are fraught with difficulties, especially due to a lack of abundant and evenly sampled biological and geological data. This is particularly critical for the Neotropics, due to the region’s immense size, relatively limited access, extraordinary biodiversity levels, landscape heterogeneity, and complex evolutionary and geo-climatic histories. To tackle these problems, we summarize some of the main issues associated with the analyses of biogeography and diversification, focusing on how those issues affect the inference of geographic range evolution of lineages in the Neotropics. |
| The use of areas as discrete entities is useful in parametric biogeographic models where areas are considered as traits that evolve along the phylogeny, and whose ancestral areas are estimated at speciation events (nodes). In these models, the spatial units of analysis are defined by the biogeographic hypothesis under examination. For example, it is possible to determine whether diversification rates have been historically higher in Andean or non-Andean taxa ( |
| An additional alternative to using discrete areas in biogeographical analyses is the spatial diffusion approach, which conducts spatial-temporal reconstructions under random walk models within likelihood ( |
| The popularity of DEC is based on the fact that, given a time tree and associated terminal distributions, it can provide detailed biogeographic reconstructions of the ancestral origin of a clade and the history of dispersal and extinction events that shaped its spatial evolution ( |
| Bay-area, a data augmentation approach based on stochastic mapping that extends the DEC model to deal with a large number of unit areas, has been proposed to tackle the limited number of areas allowed in DEC ( |
Figure 5Main evolutionary and ecological processes contributing to the formation of species richness.
The regional species pool (light gray box) is defined as the sum of all the local species assemblages (darker gray box). Black arrows indicate processes that increase species richness, red arrows processes that reduce species richness. Note the hierarchical organization of processes resulting in species richness, with evolutionary processes occurring over regional to continental spatiotemporal scales and ecological processes occurring over local scales. Speciation and dispersal contribute new species to the regional pool, while extinction removes species. Dispersal mediated by abiotic habitat filtering and biotic facilitation (Kraft & Ackerly, 2014) increase the richness of local assemblages by enhancing establishment of species preadapted to local conditions, or aiding in the establishment of other species. Biotic interactions such as predation and competition may serve to reduce local richness. Diagram modified from Schluter & Ricklefs (1993) and Albert, Val & Hoorn (in press).
Human impacts on Neotropical biodiversity.
| Humans have occupied the Neotropics since about the end of the Late Pleistocene (10–20 kya) and were likely instrumental in promoting the extinction of the diverse fauna of large-bodied mammals ( |
| Apart from the effects of past human activity on Neotropical biodiversity, current habitat loss, climate change and neglected conservation strategies pose increasingly serious threats to natural landscapes. Indeed, these are widely known to be the primary drivers of the current global biodiversity crisis. Studies that quantify genetic diversity, vulnerability, and extinction risk derived from the impact of habitat loss and climate change are essential to grasp how current human activities are expected to impact the future of Neotropical diversity at multiple levels. Although we now have a fair understanding of several components of Neotropical biodiversity, for many taxonomic groups, well-defined processes remain elusive and biases loom large; refining these issues will constitute an area of active scientific exploration for the next decade and beyond. |