Range restricted old and young lineages show the southern Western Ghats to be both a museum and a cradle of diversity for woody plants

Author:

Gopal Abhishek12ORCID,Bharti D. K.1,Page Navendu3,Dexter Kyle G.45,Krishnamani Ramanathan6,Kumar Ajith7,Joshi Jahnavi12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CSIR-Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Uppal Road, Hyderabad, India

2. Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research (AcSIR), Ghaziabad, India

3. Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun, India

4. School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

5. Tropical Diversity Section, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

6. The Rainforest Initiative, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India

7. Centre for Wildlife Studies, Bangalore, Karnataka, India

Abstract

The Western Ghats (WG) mountain chain is a global biodiversity hotspot with high diversity and endemicity of woody plants. The latitudinal breadth of the WG offers an opportunity to determine the evolutionary drivers of latitudinal diversity patterns. We examined the spatial patterns of evolutionary diversity using complementary phylogenetic diversity and endemism measures. To examine if different regions of the WG serve as a museum or cradle of evolutionary diversity, we examined the distribution of 470 species based on distribution modelling and occurrence locations across the entire region. In accordance with the expectation, we found that the southern WG is both a museum and cradle of woody plant evolutionary diversity, as a higher proportion of both old and young evolutionary lineages are restricted to the southern WG. The diversity gradient is likely driven by high geo-climatic stability in the south and phylogenetic niche conservatism for moist and aseasonal sites. This is corroborated by persistent lineage nestedness at almost all evolutionary depths (10–135 million years), and a strong correlation of evolutionary diversity with drought seasonality, precipitation and topographic heterogeneity. Our results highlight the global value of the WG, demonstrating, in particular, the importance of protecting the southern WG—an engine of plant diversification and persistence.

Funder

India Alliance DBT Wellcome grant

CSIR-Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology,

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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