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Ecological causes of uneven mammal diversity
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ABSTRACT
The uneven distributions of species over geography (e.g., tropical versus temperate regions) and phylogeny (e.g., rodents and bats versus the aardvark) are prominent biological patterns for which causal interconnections remain enigmatic. Here we investigate this central issue for living mammals using time-sliced clades sampled from a comprehensive recent phylogeny (
N
=5,911 species, ∼70% with DNA) to assess how different levels of unsampled extinction impact the inferred causes of species richness variation. Speciation rates are found to strongly exceed crown age as a predictor of clade species richness at every time slice, rejecting a clock-like model in which the oldest clades are the most speciose. Instead, mammals that are low-vagility or daytime-active show the fastest recent speciation and greatest extant richness. This suggests primary roles for dispersal limitation leading to geographic speciation (peripatric isolation) and diurnal adaptations leading to ecological speciation (time partitioning). Rates of speciation are also faster in temperate than tropical lineages, but only among older clades, consistent with the idea that many temperate lineages are ephemeral. These insights, enabled by our analytical framework, offer straightforward support for ecological effects on speciation-rate variation among clades as the primary cause of uneven phylogenetic richness patterns.
Title: Ecological causes of uneven mammal diversity
Description:
ABSTRACT
The uneven distributions of species over geography (e.
g.
, tropical versus temperate regions) and phylogeny (e.
g.
, rodents and bats versus the aardvark) are prominent biological patterns for which causal interconnections remain enigmatic.
Here we investigate this central issue for living mammals using time-sliced clades sampled from a comprehensive recent phylogeny (
N
=5,911 species, ∼70% with DNA) to assess how different levels of unsampled extinction impact the inferred causes of species richness variation.
Speciation rates are found to strongly exceed crown age as a predictor of clade species richness at every time slice, rejecting a clock-like model in which the oldest clades are the most speciose.
Instead, mammals that are low-vagility or daytime-active show the fastest recent speciation and greatest extant richness.
This suggests primary roles for dispersal limitation leading to geographic speciation (peripatric isolation) and diurnal adaptations leading to ecological speciation (time partitioning).
Rates of speciation are also faster in temperate than tropical lineages, but only among older clades, consistent with the idea that many temperate lineages are ephemeral.
These insights, enabled by our analytical framework, offer straightforward support for ecological effects on speciation-rate variation among clades as the primary cause of uneven phylogenetic richness patterns.
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