生物
单系
生态学
生物扩散
属
适应性辐射
生态位
栖息地
生物地理学
生境破碎化
克莱德
系统发育树
人口
社会学
人口学
基因
生物化学
作者
Amanda S. Santos,Erton Mendonça de Almeida,Paulo Aecyo,Lucas Costa,Artur Maia Wanderley,Henrique Batalha‐Filho,Magdalena Vaio,Mark W. Chase,Maarten J. M. Christenhusz,Leonardo P. Félix,Gustavo Souza
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.ympev.2023.107929
摘要
Ameroglossum is a rare plant genus endemic to northeastern of Brazil, initially monospecific (A. pernambucense) and recently expanded by the description of eight new species and two related genera. The genus was initially placed in the family Scrophulariaceae, but this has never been phylogenetically tested. This group is ecologically restricted to rocky inselberg habitats that function as island-like systems (ILS) with spatial fragmentation, limited area, environmental heterogeneity, temporal isolation and low connectivity. Here we use a phylogenetic perspective to test the hypothesis that Ameroglossum diversification was related to island-like radiation in inselbergs. Our results support that Ameroglossum is monophyletic only with the inclusion of Catimbaua and Isabelcristinia (named here as Ameroglossum sensu lato) and this group was well-supported in the family Linderniaceae. Biogeographic analyses suggest that the ancestral of Ameroglossum and related genus arrived in South America c.a. 15 million years ago by long-distance dispersal, given the ancestral distribution of Linderniaceae in Africa. In rocky outcrop habitats, Ameroglossum s.l. developed floral morphological specialization associated with pollinating hummingbirds, compatible with an island-like model. However, no increase in speciation rate was detected, which may be related to high extinction rates and/or slow diversification rate in this ecologically restrictive environment. Altogether, in Ameroglossum key innovations involving flowers seem to have offered opportunities for evolution of greater phenotypic diversity and occupation of new niches in rocky outcrop environments.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI