Literature DB >> 31161911

Habitat preference modulates trans-oceanic dispersal in a terrestrial vertebrate.

Mozes P K Blom1,2, Nicholas J Matzke1,3, Jason G Bragg1, Evy Arida4, Christopher C Austin5, Adam R Backlin6, Miguel A Carretero7, Robert N Fisher8, Frank Glaw9, Stacie A Hathaway8, Djoko T Iskandar10, Jimmy A McGuire11, Benjamin R Karin11, Sean B Reilly11, Eric N Rittmeyer1,5, Sara Rocha12, Mickaël Sanchez13, Alexander L Stubbs11, Miguel Vences14, Craig Moritz1.   

Abstract

The importance of long-distance dispersal (LDD) in shaping geographical distributions has been debated since the nineteenth century. In terrestrial vertebrates, LDD events across large water bodies are considered highly improbable, but organismal traits affecting dispersal capacity are generally not taken into account. Here, we focus on a recent lizard radiation and combine a summary-coalescent species tree based on 1225 exons with a probabilistic model that links dispersal capacity to an evolving trait, to investigate whether ecological specialization has influenced the probability of trans-oceanic dispersal. Cryptoblepharus species that occur in coastal habitats have on average dispersed 13 to 14 times more frequently than non-coastal species and coastal specialization has, therefore, led to an extraordinarily widespread distribution that includes multiple continents and distant island archipelagoes. Furthermore, their presence across the Pacific substantially predates the age of human colonization and we can explicitly reject the possibility that these patterns are solely shaped by human-mediated dispersal. Overall, by combining new analytical methods with a comprehensive phylogenomic dataset, we use a quantitative framework to show how coastal specialization can influence dispersal capacity and eventually shape geographical distributions at a macroevolutionary scale.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cryptoblepharus; biogeography; exon capture; long-distance dispersal

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31161911      PMCID: PMC6571479          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2018.2575

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


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1.  Habitat preference modulates trans-oceanic dispersal in a terrestrial vertebrate.

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