Spatiotemporal patterns of historical connections between Amazonian and Atlantic forests

Author:

Fabrício Machado Arielli12ORCID,Nakamura Gabriel13ORCID,Duarte Ritter Camila24ORCID,Duarte Leandro1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Phylogenetic and Functional Ecology Lab (LEFF), Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS) , Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul , Brazil

2. Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia , Amazonas , Brazil

3. Instituto Nacional de Ciência e Tecnologia - EECBio - Universidade Federal de Goiás , Goiânia , Brazil

4. Instituto Juruá , Manaus, Amazonas, 69083-300 , Brazil

Abstract

Abstract Despite the disjunct distribution of the Amazonian and the Atlantic forests, three historical connections between those biomes have been hypothesized: through Northeast Brazil, the Brazilian Cerrado, and the Southeast–Northwest. Temporal variation has been suggested to occur in these connections, with recent connections for the Northeast and older connections for the Southeast–Northwest. We tested for the hypothesis of temporal variation in these connections using Neotropical mammals as a study group. Phylogenetic and spatial data of sister groups from each forest were combined to access the spatiotemporal patterns of these connections. The relationship between distance route and divergence times was tested using linear regression. The results revealed that the previously suggested spatiotemporal pattern was corroborated only for Rodentia but not for Didelphimorphia and Chiroptera, showing both old and recent connections for all routes. In addition, each family revealed specific connections at different times. We refute the previously proposed absence of old connections through the Northeast route. Rather, temporal variation in the Northeast differs among the mammalian groups according to their evolutionary histories. Owing to the biogeographical history of each group, different connections were found at different times. Therefore, connections between these forests cannot be explained by a single spatiotemporal pattern.

Funder

Conselho Nacional de Desenvo­lvimento Científico e Tecnológico

National Institutes for Science and Technology

FAPEG

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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