Linking South American dry regions by the Gran Chaco: Insights from the evolutionary history and ecological diversification of Gomphrena s.str. (Gomphrenoideae, Amaranthaceae)

Author:

Bena María J.12ORCID,Baranzelli Matias C.1,Costas Santiago M.1,Cosacov Andrea1,Acosta María C.1,Moreira‐Muñoz Andrés3,Sérsic Alicia N.1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratorio de Ecología Evolutiva—Biología Floral, Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal (IMBIV), CONICET Universidad Nacional de Córdoba Av. Vélez Sarsfield 1611 Córdoba Argentina

2. Instituto de Botánica Darwinion (CONICET—ANCEFN) Labarden 200 San Isidro B1642HYD Buenos Aires Argentina

3. Instituto de Geografía Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso Av. Brasil Valparaíso 2241 Chile

Abstract

AbstractGeoclimatic events driving South American aridization have generated biota differentiation due to barriers and new environment formation. New environments allow species climatic niche evolution, or the geographical expansion of an existing one. Understanding the role these processes play may clarify the evolution of South American biota. Gomphrena L. ranges across almost all the continent's arid environments. We tested whether South American drylands are biogeographically connected through the Gran Chaco but, due to different aridity levels, lineage diversification could have also been associated with the evolution of climatic niches and morphological or physiological traits. With available data, we generated a dated phylogeny, estimated ancestral ranges, performed diversification analyses, reconstructed ancestral states of two characters, and examined if niches have changed between lineages. Results showed that Gomphrena diversified throughout the easternmost South American drylands ~15.4 Ma, and subsequently three independent clades colonized the western arid regions during the last Andean pulse, and after the marine transgressions (~4.8–0.4 Ma) via the Gran Chaco. The colonization implied an increase in the diversification rate of annuals over perennials and the progressive east–west differentiation of the occupied climatic niche. This diversification was influenced by C4 photosynthesis, which could have acted as a niche opener to conquer new environments after the Paranaean Sea withdrew. Spatiotemporal patterns found in Gomphrena suggest that geographical expansion and evolution of climatic niches played a common but decoupled role in promoting diversification. These results show that the Gran Chaco may have acted as a historical connection linking South American drylands.

Funder

Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas

Fondo para la Investigación Científica y Tecnológica

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference94 articles.

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