Beta diversity patterns in Andean rodents: current and historical factors as drivers of turnover and nestedness

Author:

Novillo Agustina1ORCID,Lanzone Cecilia2,Jayat J Pablo3,Teta Pablo4,Ojeda Agustina A5,Cristobal Luciana1,Ojeda Ricardo A5

Affiliation:

1. Instituto de Biodiversidad Neotropical (CCT-CONICET TUCUMAN) , Residencia Universitaria Horco Molle s/n, CP 4017, Tucumán , Argentina

2. Laboratorio de Genética Evolutiva FCEQyN (IBS, CONICET-UNaM) , Félix de Azara 1552, CP 3300, Misiones , Argentina

3. Unidad Ejecutora Lillo (CONICET-Fundacion Miguel Lillo) , Miguel Lillo 251, CP 4000, Tucumán , Argentina

4. División Mastozoología, Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales “Bernardino Rivadavia” , Av. Angel Gallardo 470 - C1405DJR, Buenos Aires , Argentina

5. Laboratorio de Filogeografía, Taxonomía Integrativa y Ecología (LFTIE-IADIZA-CCT-CONICET Mendoza) , Avenida Ruiz Leal s/n, Parque General San Martín, CC 507, CP 5500, Mendoza , Argentina

Abstract

Abstract The Andes are known to be one of the most species-rich regions on Earth, with their origination promoting formation of new habitats and acting as climatic barriers. This orogenic event was structured latitudinally with 3 major segments having different formation times and with different environmental and historical conditions. The Andean region has been historically important in the evolutionary history of small mammals and is considered the region of Earth with the highest values of rodent species richness and turnover. Therefore, the region provides an excellent opportunity to evaluate mechanisms involved in structuring rodent assemblages and beta diversity patterns. Here, we assessed spatial patterns of rodent beta diversity along the Andes Mountains, with specific goals of examining patterns of turnover and nestedness as 2 recognized processes that drive species composition. We explored the role of spatial, climate, and historical factors on beta diversity patterns using geographic range maps for 432 rodent species to construct a species presence–absence matrix. We used piecewise regressions to identify latitudinal breakpoints in turnover and nestedness, and conducted multiple regressions and variation-partitioning approaches to assess the contribution of each set of postulated drivers in shaping beta diversity patterns. Beta diversity decreases from north to south. The highest turnover was located at the Northern Andes (5°N and 10°S) and western-central Andes (20°S and 35°S). Nestedness was higher below 40°S and in some areas of the western-central Andes between 15° and 20°S. Turnover and nestedness registered breakpoints coincident with the Central and Southern Andes limit. Turnover explained most of the beta diversity for all segments, although within the Southern Andes there was also some contribution of nestedness. In all segments, beta diversity was mainly explained by spatial factors with minor contributions from spatially structured climate (Northern Andes), interaction of all factors (Central Andes), and the interaction between current climate and history (Southern Andes).

Funder

CONICET

Agencia–SECYT

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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