Incorporating evolutionary history into conservation planning in biodiversity hotspots

Author:

Buerki Sven1,Callmander Martin W.23,Bachman Steven1,Moat Justin1,Labat Jean-Noël4,Forest Félix1

Affiliation:

1. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 3AB, UK

2. Missouri Botanical Garden, PO Box 299, St Louis, MO 63166-0299, USA

3. Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la ville de Genève, ch. de l'Impératrice 1, 1292 Chambésy, Switzerland

4. Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle de Paris (UMR 7205), Case Postale 39, 57 rue Cuvier, 75231 05 CEDEX, Paris, France

Abstract

There is increased evidence that incorporating evolutionary history directly in conservation actions is beneficial, particularly given the likelihood that extinction is not random and that phylogenetic diversity (PD) is lost at higher rates than species diversity. This evidence is even more compelling in biodiversity hotspots, such as Madagascar, where less than 10% of the original vegetation remains. Here, we use the Leguminosae, an ecologically and economically important plant family, and a combination of phylogenetics and species distribution modelling, to assess biodiversity patterns and identify regions, coevolutionary processes and ecological factors that are important in shaping this diversity, especially during the Quaternary. We show evidence that species distribution and community PD are predicted by watershed boundaries, which enable the identification of a network of refugia and dispersal corridors that were perhaps important for maintaining community integrity during past climate change. Phylogenetically clustered communities are found in the southwest of the island at low elevation and share a suite of morphological characters (especially fruit morphology) indicative of coevolution with their main dispersers, the extinct and extant lemurs. Phylogenetically over-dispersed communities are found along the eastern coast at sea level and may have resulted from many independent dispersal events from the drier and more seasonal regions of Madagascar.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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