doctoralThesis
Determinantes ecológicos de processos macro e microevolutivos em regiões complexas
Fecha
2018-05-10Registro en:
RODRÍGUEZ, Carlos Adrián García. Determinantes ecológicos de processos macro e microevolutivos em regiões complexas. 2018. 160f. Tese (Doutorado em Ecologia) - Centro de Biociências, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2018.
Autor
Rodríguez, Carlos Adrián García
Resumen
Mountain areas around the world cover less than 15% of global land surface;
nevertheless, they concentrate around 90% of the hotspots of species diversity
and 40% of the hotspots of endemism. Available evidence suggest that
ecological factors such as landscape features (i.e topographic complexity,
climatic heterogeneity and their historical dynamics) of mountains may play an
important role in the evolution and maintenance of rich biotas at such regions.
In my dissertation I aim to evaluate the role of such factors in both macro (i.e
global speciation patterns) and microevolutionary (i.e intra-specific genetic and
trait divergence) processes using amphibians as study system. In the first
chapter, we tested in a global scale the Montane Pumps hypothesis, which
proposes that speciation rates are faster in mountains explaining higher
diversities in those regions. To this end we used a near complete Amphibian
phylogeny containing 7238 species (>90% of the group’s extant diversity) and
conducted a Bayesian Analysis in Macroevolutionary Admixtures (BAMM) to
estimate speciation rates. Then we combined this information with available
range maps to explore Amphibian geographic patterns of speciation and
evaluated its association with complex terrains (mountains) by estimating a
global index of topographic complexity. We found that globally, speciation
rates are faster in regions of high topographic complexity independently of
latitude. We repeated our analyses using the Wallace’s Zoogeographic regions,
taking into account regional independent evolutionary histories, and found the
same pattern in eight out of the total 11 zoogeographical realms. In a second
chapter, we assess the relative role of different components of the landscape in
promoting lineage diversification across the roughed topography of Isthmian
Central America (Costa Rica & Panama), a geologically young but highly
biodiverse region. Here we use available mitochondrial DNA to estimate
genetic divergence within 10 amphibian species (8 anurans and 2 salamanders)
with different biologies that co-occur in the region. Then, we use a Multiple
Matrix of Regression with Randomization to assess the relative role of isolation
by distance, by environment and by resistance (topography, current climate, and
LGM paleoclimate) in shaping the geographic patterns of genetic structuration
within each species. So far, we have not found a general force that explains
genetic divergence in all studied species. Instead, we have found idiosyncratic
responses that may reflect specific aspects of their life histories, such as
dispersal capabilities, range size or reproductive potential. In the third chapter, we test how climatic and topographic barriers may influence variation in an
important behavioral trait such as are advertisement calls. In anurans, such calls
has species-specific features that play an important role in recognition. Then,
variation in spectro-temporal features between populations has been proposed
as a mechanism of reproductive isolation that may promote speciation in the
long term. For this chapter I recorded advertisement calls of 170 males from 2
species of Diasporus frogs distributed in Costa Rica. I made recordings at 21
sites in all the country ranging from sea level to 2800 meters elevation. We use
such information we conduct bioacoustics analyses to first document
geographic variation and then test if the geographic distance, physical or
ecological barriers between populations, or adaptation to local conditions could
shape such patterns. To this end, we incorporate spatial analyses (niche models,
terrain roughness estimations and circuit theory) to generate levels of
population isolation and apply Generalized Dissimilarity Matrix test to address
this question. In both species, I found high levels of acoustic variation and
among population isolation derived by the tested factors. However, only
topography significantly explained acoustic divergence in D. diastema while
climatic dissimilarity and geographic distance are only marginally associated
with the patters of acoustic variation in D. hylaeformis. In conclusion, other
forces operating independently in the local scale -such as sexual selection,
character displacement or genetic drift- may be more determinant in the
evolution of acoustic signals in these species