1. Replicated radiation of a plant clade along a cloud forest archipelago.
- Author
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Donoghue MJ, Eaton DAR, Maya-Lastra CA, Landis MJ, Sweeney PW, Olson ME, Cacho NI, Moeglein MK, Gardner JR, Heaphy NM, Castorena M, Rivas AS, Clement WL, and Edwards EJ
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Physiological, Animals, Mexico, Phylogeny, Forests, Gene Flow
- Abstract
Replicated radiations, in which sets of similar forms evolve repeatedly within different regions, can provide powerful insights into parallel evolution and the assembly of functional diversity within communities. Several cases have been described in animals, but in plants we lack well-documented cases of replicated radiation that combine comprehensive phylogenetic and biogeographic analyses, the delimitation of geographic areas within which a set of 'ecomorphs' evolved independently and the identification of potential underlying mechanisms. Here we document the repeated evolution of a set of leaf ecomorphs in a group of neotropical plants. The Oreinotinus lineage within the angiosperm clade Viburnum spread from Mexico to Argentina through disjunct cloud forest environments. In 9 of 11 areas of endemism, species with similar sets of leaf forms evolved in parallel. We reject gene-flow-mediated evolution of similar leaves and show, instead, that species with disparate leaf forms differ in their climatic niches, supporting ecological adaptation as the driver of parallelism. Our identification of a case of replicated radiation in plants sets the stage for comparative analyses of such phenomena across the tree of life., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)
- Published
- 2022
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