Using community phylogenetics to assess phylogenetic structure in the Fitzcarrald region of Western Amazonia

Author:

Craig Jack M.1ORCID,Carvalho Tiago P.2ORCID,Chakrabarty Prosanta3ORCID,Derouen Valerie3ORCID,Ortega Hernán4ORCID,Petry Paulo5ORCID,Reis Roberto E.6ORCID,Tagliacollo Victor A.7ORCID,Albert James S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Louisiana at Lafayette, USA

2. Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Colombia

3. Louisiana State University, USA

4. Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Peru

5. Harvard University, USA

6. Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

7. Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil

Abstract

ABSTRACT Here we explore the use of community phylogenetics as a tool to document patterns of biodiversity in the Fitzcarrald region, a remote area in Southwestern Amazonia. For these analyses, we subdivide the region into basin-wide assemblages encompassing the headwaters of four Amazonian tributaries (Urubamba, Yuruá, Purús and Las Piedras basins), and habitat types: river channels, terra firme (non-floodplain) streams, and floodplain lakes. We present a robust, well-documented collection of fishes from the region including 272 species collected from 132 field sites over 63 field days and four years, comprising the most extensive collection of fishes from this region to date. We conduct a preliminary community phylogenetic analysis based on this collection and recover results largely statistically indistinguishable from the random expectation, with only a few instances of phylogenetic structure. Based on these results, and of those published in other recent biogeographic studies, we conclude that the Fitzcarrald fish species pool accumulated over a period of several million years, plausibly as a result of dispersal from the larger species pool of Greater Amazonia.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

Aquatic Science,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference90 articles.

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