Habitat opening fostered diversity: impact of dispersal and habitat‐shifts in the evolutionary history of a speciose afrotropical insect group

Author:

Hévin Noémie M.‐C.123ORCID,Goldstein Paul Z.4,Aduse‐Poku Kwaku5ORCID,Barbut Jérôme6ORCID,Mitchell Andrew7ORCID,Zilli Alberto8ORCID,Clamens Anne‐Laure2ORCID,Capdevielle‐Dulac Claire9,Wahlberg Niklas10ORCID,Le Ru Bruno P.911ORCID,Kergoat Gael J.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. ISEM, Université de Montpellier, CNRS, IRD Montpellier France

2. CBGP, INRAE, IRD, CIRAD, Institut Agro, Univ. Montpellier Montpellier France

3. Université de Poitiers Poitiers France

4. Systematic Entomology Laboratory, USDA, Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History Washington DC USA

5. Department of Life and Earth Sciences, Perimeter College, Georgia State University Decatur GA USA

6. Institut de Systématique, Evolution, Biodiversité, Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Direction des collections Paris France

7. Australian Museum Research Institute Sydney NSW Australia

8. Natural History Museum, Life Sciences London UK

9. UMR Evolution, Génomes, Comportement et Ecologie, CNRS, IRD, Université Paris‐Saclay Gif‐sur‐Yvette France

10. Department of Biology, Lund University Lund Sweden

11. Unité de Recherche UMR 247, African Insect Science for Food and Health (icipe) Nairobi Kenya

Abstract

The opening of habitats associated with the emergence of C4 grasslands during the Neogene had a massive influence on the evolution of plant and animal communities. Strikingly, the impacts of grassland expansion on species diversification in Africa, where the largest surface of grasslands and savannas in the world is located, are not well understood. To explore the impact of habitat opening, we investigate the evolution of noctuid stemborers, a group of moths mostly associated with open habitats, and whose diversity is centered in the Afrotropics. We generate a dated molecular phylogeny for ca 80% of the known stemborer species, and assess the role of habitat opening on the evolutionary trajectory of the group through a combination of parametric historical biogeography, ancestral character state estimation, life history traits and habitat‐dependent diversification analyses. Our results support an origin of stemborers in Southern and East Africa ca 20 million years ago (Ma), with range expansions linked to the increased availability of open habitats to act as dispersal corridors, and closed habitats acting as potent barriers to dispersal. Early specialization on open habitats was maintained over time, with shifts towards closed habitats being rare and invariably unidirectional. Analyses of life history traits showed that habitat changes involved specific features likely associated with grassland adaptations, such as variations in larval behavior and color. We compare these findings to those previously inferred for an Afrotropical butterfly group that diversified roughly in parallel with the stemborers but distributed predominantly in closed habitats. Remarkably, these two groups show nearly opposite responses in relation to habitat specialization, whether in terms of biogeographical patterns, or in terms of rates of transition between open and closed habitats. We conclude that habitat opening played a major role in the evolutionary history of Afrotropical lineages through dispersal and adaptation linked to habitat shifts.

Publisher

Wiley

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