Anatomy of a mega‐radiation: Biogeography and niche evolution in Astragalus

Author:

Folk Ryan A.1ORCID,Charboneau Joseph L. M.2ORCID,Belitz Michael3ORCID,Singh Tajinder1,Kates Heather R.3ORCID,Soltis Douglas E.3456ORCID,Soltis Pamela S.345ORCID,Guralnick Robert P.35ORCID,Siniscalchi Carolina M.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences Mississippi State University Mississippi State, MS USA

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI USA

3. Florida Museum University of Florida Gainesville FL USA

4. Genetics Institute University of Florida Gainesville FL USA

5. Biodiversity Institute University of Florida Gainesville FL USA

6. Department of Biology University of Florida Gainesville FL USA

7. General Libraries Mississippi State University Mississippi State, MS USA

Abstract

AbstractPremiseAstragalus (Fabaceae), with more than 3000 species, represents a globally successful radiation of morphologically highly similar species predominant across the northern hemisphere. It has attracted attention from systematists and biogeographers, who have asked what factors might be behind the extraordinary diversity of this important arid‐adapted clade and what sets it apart from close relatives with far less species richness.MethodsHere, for the first time using extensive phylogenetic sampling, we asked whether (1) Astragalus is uniquely characterized by bursts of radiation or whether diversification instead is uniform and no different from closely related taxa. Then we tested whether the species diversity of Astragalus is attributable specifically to its predilection for (2) cold and arid habitats, (3) particular soils, or to (4) chromosome evolution. Finally, we tested (5) whether Astragalus originated in central Asia as proposed and (6) whether niche evolutionary shifts were subsequently associated with the colonization of other continents.ResultsOur results point to the importance of heterogeneity in the diversification of Astragalus, with upshifts associated with the earliest divergences but not strongly tied to any abiotic factor or biogeographic regionalization tested here. The only potential correlate with diversification we identified was chromosome number. Biogeographic shifts have a strong association with the abiotic environment and highlight the importance of central Asia as a biogeographic gateway.ConclusionsOur investigation shows the importance of phylogenetic and evolutionary studies of logistically challenging “mega‐radiations.” Our findings reject any simple key innovation behind high diversity and underline the often nuanced, multifactorial processes leading to species‐rich clades.

Publisher

Wiley

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