Pre‐adaptation and adaptation shape trait‐environment matching in the Neotropics

Author:

Velásquez‐Puentes Francisco J.123ORCID,Torke Benjamin M.4ORCID,Barratt Christopher D.125ORCID,Dexter Kyle G.67ORCID,Pennington Toby78ORCID,Pezzini Flávia Fonseca7ORCID,Zizka Alexander59ORCID,Onstein Renske E.125ORCID

Affiliation:

1. German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle‐Jena‐Leipzig Leipzig Germany

2. Faculty of Life Sciences Leipzig University Leipzig Germany

3. Departamento de Química y Biología Universidad del Norte Barranquilla Colombia

4. Institute of Systematic Botany New York Botanical Garden Bronx New York USA

5. Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden the Netherlands

6. School of GeoSciences University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

7. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

8. Department of Geography University of Exeter Exeter UK

9. Department of Biology Philipps‐University Marburg Marburg Germany

Abstract

AbstractAimFunctional traits shape the distribution of taxa across environments. However, it remains unclear whether trait and environmental niche evolution are correlated, and what happened first: trait change facilitating environment shifts (pre‐adaptation) or environmental change leading to trait change (adaptation). We focus on a species‐rich Neotropical legume radiation to shed light on this enigma.LocationNeotropics.Time PeriodCenozoic.Major Taxa StudiedFabaceae: Papilionoidae: Swartzia.MethodsWe assembled leaflet, fruit and petal size data from monographs and herbarium collections for 86 to 96% of the c. 180 Swartzia species, inferred a dated Swartzia phylogenetic tree from existing DNA sequences covering 38% of the species and integrated these with distribution, soil and climate data. We used phylogenetic linear regression to quantify trait–environment relationships and applied comparative methods to evaluate modes of correlated evolution between traits and environments.ResultsLeaflet and petal size were strongly linked to climate, while fruit size was not associated with climate or soil characteristics. Evolutionary transitions to relatively low rainfall and low temperature environments were conditional on the evolution of small leaflets, whereas transitions to wet and warm environments were preceded by the evolution of larger leaflets. In contrast, transitions to the warmest or coldest environments were followed, rather than preceded, by petal loss.Main ConclusionOur results show that the macroevolution of functional traits has influenced the broad‐scale distribution of Swartzia across Neotropical rainforest, seasonally dry, montane and inundated habitats. We suggest that trait evolution is conditional on environmental change but both pre‐adaptive and adaptive processes may occur. These processes are important to understand the distribution of diversity at both regional (e.g. Amazonia) and global biogeographical scales.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Global and Planetary Change

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