Tempo and drivers of plant diversification in the European mountain system

Author:

Smyčka JanORCID,Roquet CristinaORCID,Boleda Martí,Alberti Adriana,Boyer FrédéricORCID,Douzet Rolland,Perrier ChristopheORCID,Rome Maxime,Valay Jean-Gabriel,Denoeud FranceORCID,Šemberová KristýnaORCID,Zimmermann Niklaus E.ORCID,Thuiller Wilfried,Wincker PatrickORCID,Alsos Inger G.ORCID,Coissac Eric,Roquet CristinaORCID,Boleda Martí,Alberti Adriana,Boyer FrédéricORCID,Douzet Rolland,Perrier ChristopheORCID,Rome Maxime,Valay Jean-Gabriel,Denoeud FranceORCID,Zimmermann Niklaus E.ORCID,Thuiller Wilfried,Wincker PatrickORCID,Alsos Inger G.ORCID,Coissac Eric,Lavergne Sébastien,Lavergne Sébastien,

Abstract

AbstractThere is still limited consensus on the evolutionary history of species-rich temperate alpine floras due to a lack of comparable and high-quality phylogenetic data covering multiple plant lineages. Here we reconstructed when and how European alpine plant lineages diversified, i.e., the tempo and drivers of speciation events. We performed full-plastome phylogenomics and used multi-clade comparative models applied to six representative angiosperm lineages that have diversified in European mountains (212 sampled species, 251 ingroup species total). Diversification rates remained surprisingly steady for most clades, even during the Pleistocene, with speciation events being mostly driven by geographic divergence and bedrock shifts. Interestingly, we inferred asymmetrical historical migration rates from siliceous to calcareous bedrocks, and from higher to lower elevations, likely due to repeated shrinkage and expansion of high elevation habitats during the Pleistocene. This may have buffered climate-related extinctions, but prevented speciation along elevation gradients as often documented for tropical alpine floras.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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