Geographical isolation as reproductive barrier in phylogenetically related Aquilegia species (Ranunculaceae)

IF 1.6 4区 生物学 Q3 PLANT SCIENCES Plant Biosystems Pub Date : 2023-09-15 DOI:10.1080/11263504.2023.2258897
Lorenzo Pinzani, Gabriele Casazza, Gianni Bedini, Angelino Carta
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Abstract

AbstractKnowing the determinants of biodiversity is crucial to understanding the differentiation of living organisms. Several gene-flow limiting processes can drive divergence, including adaptive ecological differentiation or geographical isolation both constituting environmental-dependent reproductive barriers. Furthermore, the strength of these processes may be associated to the degree to which ecological niches are conserved and shared by phylogenetically related species. Here, we aim to disentangle these two alternatives reproductive barriers by evaluating the degree of ecological niche similarity among phylogenetically related species. We performed ecological niche modelling (ENM) on four species belonging to a recently diversified genus (Aquilegia, Ranunculaceae) occurring in montane environments of the Alpine and Apennine chains (southern Europe). Results show that niche differentiation among species is related to phylogenetic distinctiveness.Nevertheless, niche similarity tests indicated that the conditions selected by the species are more similar than expected from the null models, even though they are sparsely available in the respective ecological spaces, suggesting that the observed pattern may result from phylogenetic niche conservatism.These results, highlight that paleogeographic events in south-European mountains may have driven divergence by isolation in Aquilegia while partially retaining the possibly ancestral characters of the niches.Keywords: Aquilegiaecological niche modelsEuropean Alpine Systemniche conservatismniche overlapsimilarity testSpeciationDisclaimerAs a service to authors and researchers we are providing this version of an accepted manuscript (AM). Copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proofs will be undertaken on this manuscript before final publication of the Version of Record (VoR). During production and pre-press, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal relate to these versions also.
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地理隔离对毛茛科毛茛属植物生殖障碍的影响
摘要了解生物多样性的决定因素对于理解生物的分化至关重要。几个基因流限制过程可以驱动分化,包括适应性生态分化或地理隔离,两者都构成依赖环境的生殖障碍。此外,这些过程的强度可能与生态位被系统发育相关物种保存和共享的程度有关。在这里,我们的目标是通过评估生态位相似性在系统发育相关物种之间的程度来解开这两个替代性生殖障碍。我们对四个物种进行了生态位建模(ENM),这些物种属于一个最近多样化的属(Aquilegia,毛茛科),它们出现在高山和亚平宁链(南欧)的山地环境中。结果表明,物种间的生态位分化与系统发育差异有关。然而,生态位相似性测试表明,物种选择的条件比零模型所期望的更相似,即使它们在各自的生态空间中是稀疏的,这表明所观察到的模式可能是系统发育生态位保守性的结果。这些结果强调,南欧山脉的古地理事件可能通过在阿奎莱吉亚的隔离而推动了分化,同时部分保留了可能的祖先壁龛特征。关键词:水系生态位模型欧洲高山系统生态位保守性生态位重叠相似性测试物种免责声明作为对作者和研究人员的服务,我们提供此版本的已接受稿件(AM)。在最终出版版本记录(VoR)之前,将对该手稿进行编辑、排版和审查。在制作和印前,可能会发现可能影响内容的错误,所有适用于期刊的法律免责声明也与这些版本有关。
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来源期刊
Plant Biosystems
Plant Biosystems 生物-植物科学
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
61
审稿时长
4 months
期刊介绍: Plant Biosystems is the research journal edited by the Società Botanica Italiana. Published three times a year, the journal is open to papers dealing with all aspects of plant biology, systematics, and ecology. Research studies containing novel and significant findings, from the molecular level to ecosystems and from micro-organisms to flowering plants, are welcome. Plant Biosystems succeeded " Giornale Botanico Italiano", the historical journal of the Società Botanica Italiana, from the year 1997. Plant Biosystems has been conceived in consideration of the recent progress in botanical research. An editorial board has been devised to ensure that all the main trends of contemporary plant science are represented. Manuscripts are classified as ''Full Paper'', ''Rapid Report'' or ''Short Communication''. A Rapid Report is intended for publication, in a concise form, of new and relevant findings. The classification as Rapid Report is determined by the Editor. A Short Communication (no more than two printed pages) is for a concise but independent report. It is not intended for publication of preliminary results. Review articles are also published, but only upon invitation by the Editor. An international panel of highly qualified referees warrants the highest scientific standard.
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