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Título : Comparative Phylogeographic Analyses Illustrate the Complex Evolutionary History of Threatened Cloud Forests of Northern Mesoamerica
Autor : Ornelas Rodríguez, Juan Francisco
Sosa Ortega, Victoria
Soltis, Douglas
Daza Rojas, Juan Manuel
González Zaragoza, Clementina
Soltis, Pamela
Gutiérrez Rodríguez, Carla
Espinosa de los Monteros, Alejandro
Castoe, Todd
Bell, Charles
Ruiz Sánchez, Eduardo
metadata.dc.subject.*: Bosques húmedos
Forested wetlands
Bosques tropicales
Tropical forests
Bosque de niebla
Cloud forests
Paleontología - Plioceno
Paleontology - Pliocene
Estratigrafía - Pleistoceno
Geology, stratigraphic - pleistocene
Paleobotánica
Paleobotany
Filogeografía
Análisis filogeográficos
Bosques de mesoámerica
Fecha de publicación : 2013
Editorial : Public Library of Science
Citación : Ornelas, J., Sosa, V., Soltis, D., Daza, J., González, C., et al. (2013) Comparative Phylogeographic Analyses Illustrate the Complex Evolutionary History of Threatened Cloud Forests of Northern Mesoamerica. PLOS ONE 8(2): 1-11 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0056283
Resumen : ABSTRACT: Comparative phylogeography can elucidate the influence of historical events on current patterns of biodiversity and can identify patterns of co-vicariance among unrelated taxa that span the same geographic areas. Here we analyze temporal and spatial divergence patterns of cloud forest plant and animal species and relate them to the evolutionary history of naturally fragmented cloud forests–among the most threatened vegetation types in northern Mesoamerica. We used comparative phylogeographic analyses to identify patterns of co-vicariance in taxa that share geographic ranges across cloud forest habitats and to elucidate the influence of historical events on current patterns of biodiversity. We document temporal and spatial genetic divergence of 15 species (including seed plants, birds and rodents), and relate them to the evolutionary history of the naturally fragmented cloud forests. We used fossil-calibrated genealogies, coalescent-based divergence time inference, and estimates of gene flow to assess the permeability of putative barriers to gene flow. We also used the hierarchical Approximate Bayesian Computation (HABC) method implemented in the program msBayes to test simultaneous versus non-simultaneous divergence of the cloud forest lineages. Our results show shared phylogeographic breaks that correspond to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Los Tuxtlas, and the Chiapas Central Depression, with the Isthmus representing the most frequently shared break among taxa. However, dating analyses suggest that the phylogeographic breaks corresponding to the Isthmus occurred at different times in different taxa. Current divergence patterns are therefore consistent with the hypothesis of broad vicariance across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec derived from different mechanisms operating at different times. This study, coupled with existing data on divergence cloud forest species, indicates that the evolutionary history of contemporary cloud forest lineages is complex and often lineage-specific, and thus difficult to capture in a simple conservation strategy.
metadata.dc.identifier.eissn: 1932-6203
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0056283
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos de Revista en Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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