Ecological niche modeling of the Leopardus tigrinus complex sheds light on its elusive evolutionary history

Author:

Bonilla-Sánchez Alejandra1ORCID,Sartor Caroline Charão1,Fox-Rosales Lester Alexander2,Feijó Anderson34ORCID,Ramírez-Fernández José D5,Brenes-Mora Esteban5,Mooring Michael S67,Blankenship Steven R67,Sánchez-Lalinde Catalina8,Nascimento Fabio Oliveira do9ORCID,Zug Rebecca10,Oliveira Marcelo Juliano11,Dantas Marinho Paulo Henrique12,Braga Ferreira Guilherme11,Solari Sergio13ORCID,de Oliveira Tadeu Gomes214,Eizirik Eduardo114ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Escola de Ciências da Saúde e da Vida, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul (PUCRS) , Av. Ipiranga, 6681, Porto Alegre, RS 90619-900 , Brazil

2. Universidade Estadual do Maranhão , Av. Oeste Externa, 2220, São Cristovao, São Luís, MA 65010-120 , Brazil

3. Negaunee Integrative Research Center, Field Museum of Natural History , Chicago, IL 60605 , United States

4. Key Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beichen West Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100101 , China

5. Costa Rica Wildlife Foundation , Av. 7 and 9, Calle 29, Barrio Escalante 75 Metros Norte Del Parque Francia, San José 10101 , Costa Rica

6. Department of Biology, Point Loma Nazarene University , 3900 Lomaland Drive, San Diego, CA 92106 , United States

7. Quetzal Education Research , San José, San Gerardo de Dota 11911 , Costa Rica

8. Onca Fundación Para El Estudio de la Diversidad , Bogotá D.C. 1101 , Colombia

9. Mastozoologia, Museu de Zoologia, Universidade de São Paulo , R. da Reitoria, R. Cidade Universitária, 374, Butantã, São Paulo, SP 05508-220 , Brazil

10. Laboratorio de Ecología y Conservación de Carnívoros, Universidad San Francisco de Quito , Diego de Robles s/n, Quito 170901 , Ecuador

11. Instituto Biotrópicos , Av. Conselheiro Rodrigues Alves, 1252, Vila Mariana, São Paulo, SP 04016-035 , Brazil

12. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte , Lagoa Nova, Natal, RN 59078-970 , Brazil

13. Grupo Mastozoología, Instituto de Biología, Universidad de Antioquia , Calle 67 53-108, AA 1226 Medellín , Colombia

14. Instituto Pró-Carnívoros , Av. Horácio Netto, 1030, Chácaras Interlagos, Atibaia, SP 12945-010 , Brazil

Abstract

Abstract The evolutionary history and taxonomy of the Leopardus tigrinus species complex have been studied based on several approaches, mostly employing genetic and morphological data, leading to distinct classification schemes. We approached this problem from an ecological perspective, with 2 main goals: (i) to evaluate ecological niche differences among regional L. tigrinus populations to determine the extent of ecological divergence among them; and (ii) to identify environmental barriers to historical dispersal that could have driven differentiation among the proposed groups. We modeled the ecological niche of all taxonomic/geographic groups proposed so far to comprise the L. tigrinus complex using the Maximum Entropy algorithm, and evaluated geographic and ecological niche differences among them. Furthermore, we investigated possible environmental barriers to historical dispersal that could have driven differentiation among regional groups. We evaluated 4 hypothetical barriers across 3 time periods to assess their potential historical effect. We found high ecological divergence between northeastern tigrina populations and the northern Andean and Central American tigrinas. Other groups within the L. tigrinus complex are less divergent. In addition, the Guiana Shield tigrina, where the type locality of the species is located, seems to be ecologically similar to populations from northeastern Brazil while also showing some overlap with Andean populations. The Panama center, the Llanos of Colombia and Venezuela, and the Amazon region were identified as historical barriers for tigrina dispersal across all time periods. The inferred historical barriers and ecological divergence observed in this study contribute to the inference of evolutionary differentiation among geographic groups comprising the L. tigrinus complex, revealing areas of consistently low habitat suitability that have likely contributed to divergence among regional populations.

Funder

CNPq/Brazil

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference66 articles.

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