The rapid radiation of Bomarea (Alstroemeriaceae: Liliales), driven by the rise of the Andes

Author:

Tribble Carrie M12ORCID,Alzate-Guarín Fernando3ORCID,Gándara Etelvina4ORCID,Vartoumian Araz15ORCID,Burleigh John Gordon6ORCID,Zenil-Ferguson Rosana7ORCID,Specht Chelsea D8ORCID,Rothfels Carl J910ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa , Honolulu, HI , United States

2. Department of Integrative Biology and University Herbarium, University of California, Berkeley , Berkeley, CA , United States

3. Grupo de Estudios Botánicos (GEOBOTA) and Herbario Universidad de Antioquia (HUA), Instituto de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Antioquia , Medellín , Colombia

4. Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, Puebla , Puebla , Mexico

5. Department of Oral Biology, University of California , Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA , United States

6. Department of Biology, University of Florida , Gainesville, FL , United States

7. Department of Biology, University of Kentucky , Lexington, KY , United States

8. Section of Plant Biology and the L.H. Bailey Hortorium, School of Integrative Plant Science, Cornell University , Ithaca, NY , United States

9. Department of Integrative Biology and University Herbarium, University of California , Berkeley, Berkeley, CA , United States

10. Intermountain Herbarium, Department of Biology, and Ecology Center, Utah State University , Logan, UT , United States

Abstract

Abstract Geological events such as mountain uplift affect how, when, and where species diversify, but measuring those effects is a longstanding challenge. Andean orogeny impacted the evolution of regional biota by creating barriers to gene flow, opening new habitats, and changing local climate. B⁢o⁢m⁢a⁢r⁢e⁢a (Alstroemeriaceae) are tropical plants with (often) small, isolated ranges; in total, B⁢o⁢m⁢a⁢r⁢e⁢a species occur from central Mexico to central Chile. This genus appears to have evolved rapidly and quite recently, and rapid radiations are often challenging to resolve with traditional phylogenetic inference. In this study, we apply phylogenomics—with hundreds of loci, gene-tree-based data curation, and a multispecies-coalescent approach—to infer the phylogeny of B⁢o⁢m⁢a⁢r⁢e⁢a. We use this phylogeny to untangle the potential drivers of diversification and biogeographic history. In particular, we test if Andean orogeny contributed to the diversification of B⁢o⁢m⁢a⁢r⁢e⁢a. We find that B⁢o⁢m⁢a⁢r⁢e⁢a originated in the central Andes during the mid-Miocene, then spread north, following the trajectory of mountain uplift. Furthermore, Andean lineages diversified faster than non-Andean relatives. B⁢o⁢m⁢a⁢r⁢e⁢a thus demonstrates that—at least in some cases—geological change rather than environmental stability has driven high species diversity in a tropical biodiversity hotspot. These results also demonstrate the utility (and danger) of genome-scale data for making macroevolutionary inferences.

Funder

American Society of Plant Taxonomists

Pacific Bulb Society

Garden Club of America

Society of Systematic Biologists

American Philosophical Society

Torrey Botanical Society

Tinker Foundation

Integrative Biology Department at UC Berkeley

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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3. A guide to carrying out a phylogenomic target sequence capture project;Andermann,2020

4. Testing geological models of evolution of the isthmus of panama in a phylogenetic framework;Bacon,2013

5. Evolutionary persistence in Gunnera and the contribution of southern plant groups to the tropical Andes biodiversity hotspot;Bacon;PeerJ,2018

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