Conserved ancestral tropical niche but different continental histories explain the latitudinal diversity gradient in brush-footed butterflies.
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Authors
Chazot, Nicolas
Dudas, Gytis
Peña, Carlos
Aduse-Poku, Kwaku
Elias, Marianne
Warren, Andrew D
Penz, Carla M
DeVries, Phil
Fric, Zdenek F
Nylin, Soren
Müller, Chris
Kawahara, Akito Y
Lamas, Gerardo
Kleckova, Irena
Ortiz-Acevedo, Elena
Vane-Wright, Richard I
Mullen, Sean P
Wheat, Christopher W
Publication Date
2021-09-29Journal Title
Nat Commun
ISSN
2041-1723
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Volume
12
Issue
1
Pages
5717
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Physical Medium
Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Chazot, N., Condamine, F. L., Dudas, G., Peña, C., Kodandaramaiah, U., Matos-Maraví, P., Aduse-Poku, K., et al. (2021). Conserved ancestral tropical niche but different continental histories explain the latitudinal diversity gradient in brush-footed butterflies.. Nat Commun, 12 (1), 5717. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-25906-8
Abstract
The global increase in species richness toward the tropics across continents and taxonomic groups, referred to as the latitudinal diversity gradient, stimulated the formulation of many hypotheses to explain the underlying mechanisms of this pattern. We evaluate several of these hypotheses to explain spatial diversity patterns in a butterfly family, the Nymphalidae, by assessing the contributions of speciation, extinction, and dispersal, and also the extent to which these processes differ among regions at the same latitude. We generate a time-calibrated phylogeny containing 2,866 nymphalid species (~45% of extant diversity). Neither speciation nor extinction rate variations consistently explain the latitudinal diversity gradient among regions because temporal diversification dynamics differ greatly across longitude. The Neotropical diversity results from low extinction rates, not high speciation rates, and biotic interchanges with other regions are rare. Southeast Asia is also characterized by a low speciation rate but, unlike the Neotropics, is the main source of dispersal events through time. Our results suggest that global climate change throughout the Cenozoic, combined with tropical niche conservatism, played a major role in generating the modern latitudinal diversity gradient of nymphalid butterflies.
Keywords
Animal Distribution, Animals, Biodiversity, Butterflies, Extinction, Biological, Genes, Insect, Genetic Speciation, Geography, Phylogeny, Spatio-Temporal Analysis, Tropical Climate
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-25906-8
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/331177
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