Evolutionary history and environmental variability structure contemporary tropical vertebrate communities

Author:

Hsieh Chia1ORCID,Gorczynski Daniel12ORCID,Bitariho Robert3ORCID,Espinosa Santiago45ORCID,Johnson Steig6ORCID,Lima Marcela Guimarães Moreira7ORCID,Rovero Francesco89ORCID,Salvador Julia5ORCID,Santos Fernanda710ORCID,Sheil Douglas111213ORCID,Beaudrot Lydia114ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of BioSciences, Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Rice University Houston Texas USA

2. Division of Biological Sciences University of Montana Missoula Montana USA

3. Institute of Tropical Forest Conservation Mbarara University of Science and Technology Kabale Uganda

4. Facultad de Ciencias Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí San Luis Potosí Mexico

5. Escuela de Ciencias Biológicas Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador Quito Ecuador

6. Department of Anthropology & Archaeology University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

7. Biogeography of Conservation and Macroecology Laboratory, Institute of Biological Sciences Universidade Federal do Pará Belém Pará Brazil

8. Department of Biology University of Florence Florence Italy

9. MUSE‐Museo Delle Scienze Trento Italy

10. Department of Mastozoology, Zoology Coordination Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi Belém Pará Brazil

11. Forest Ecology and Forest Management Group Wageningen University and Research Wageningen The Netherlands

12. Faculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resource Management Norwegian University of Life Sciences Ås Norway

13. Center for International Forestry Research Bogor Indonesia

14. Department of Integrative Biology Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

Abstract

AbstractAimTropical regions harbour over half of the world's mammals and birds, but how their communities have assembled over evolutionary timescales remains unclear. To compare eco‐evolutionary assembly processes between tropical mammals and birds, we tested how hypotheses concerning niche conservatism, environmental stability, environmental heterogeneity and time‐for‐speciation relate to tropical vertebrate community phylogenetic and functional structure.LocationTropical rainforests worldwide.Time periodPresent.Major taxa studiedGround‐dwelling and ground‐visiting mammals and birds.MethodsWe used in situ observations of species identified from systematic camera trap sampling as realized communities from 15 protected tropical rainforests in four tropical regions worldwide. We quantified standardized phylogenetic and functional structure for each community and estimated the multi‐trait phylogenetic signal (PS) in ecological strategies for the four regional species pools of mammals and birds. Using linear regression models, we test three non‐mutually exclusive hypotheses by comparing the relative importance of colonization time, palaeo‐environmental changes in temperature and land cover since 3.3 Mya, contemporary seasonality in temperature and productivity and environmental heterogeneity for predicting community phylogenetic and functional structure.ResultsPhylogenetic and functional structure showed non‐significant yet varying tendencies towards clustering or dispersion in all communities. Mammals had stronger multi‐trait PS in ecological strategies than birds (mean PS: mammal = 0.62, bird = 0.43). Distinct dominant processes were identified for mammal and bird communities. For mammals, colonization time and elevation range significantly predicted phylogenetic clustering and functional dispersion tendencies respectively. For birds, elevation range and contemporary temperature seasonality significantly predicted phylogenetic and functional clustering tendencies, respectively, while habitat diversity significantly predicted functional dispersion tendencies.Main conclusionsOur results reveal different eco‐evolutionary assembly processes structuring contemporary tropical mammal and bird communities over evolutionary timescales that have shaped tropical diversity. Our study identified marked differences among taxonomic groups in the relative importance of historical colonization and sensitivity to environmental change.

Funder

Division of Environmental Biology

Norges Forskningsråd

Publisher

Wiley

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