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1.
Mol Ecol ; 33(9): e17341, 2024 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38576177

RESUMEN

Catastrophic flank collapses are recognized as important drivers of insular biodiversity dynamics, through the disruption of species ranges and subsequent allopatric divergence. However, little empirical data supports this conjecture, with their evolutionary consequences remaining poorly understood. Using genome-wide data within a population genomics and phylogenomics framework, we evaluate how mega-landslides have impacted evolutionary and demographic history within a species complex of weevils (Curculionidae) within the Canary Island of Tenerife. We reveal a complex genomic landscape, within which individuals of single ancestry were sampled in areas characterized by long-term geological stability, relative to the timing of flank collapses. In contrast, individuals of admixed ancestry were almost exclusively sampled within the boundaries of flank collapses. Estimated divergence times among ancestral populations aligned with the timings of mega-landslide events. Our results provide first evidence for a cyclical dynamic of range fragmentation and secondary contact across flank collapse landscapes, with support for a model where this dynamic is mediated by Quaternary climate oscillations. The context within which we reveal climate and topography to interact cyclically through time to shape the geographic structure of genetic variation, together with related recent work, highlights the importance of topoclimatic phenomena as an agent of diversification within insular invertebrates.


Asunto(s)
Genética de Población , Islas , Filogenia , Animales , Gorgojos/genética , Gorgojos/clasificación , Biodiversidad
2.
Trends Ecol Evol ; 38(7): 631-642, 2023 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36870806

RESUMEN

A recurring feature of oceanic archipelagos is the presence of adaptive radiations that generate endemic, species-rich clades that can offer outstanding insight into the links between ecology and evolution. Recent developments in evolutionary genomics have contributed towards solving long-standing questions at this interface. Using a comprehensive literature search, we identify studies spanning 19 oceanic archipelagos and 110 putative adaptive radiations, but find that most of these radiations have not yet been investigated from an evolutionary genomics perspective. Our review reveals different gaps in knowledge related to the lack of implementation of genomic approaches, as well as undersampled taxonomic and geographic areas. Filling those gaps with the required data will help to deepen our understanding of adaptation, speciation, and other evolutionary processes.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Especiación Genética , Filogenia , Ecología , Genómica
3.
J Food Sci Technol ; 59(1): 75-85, 2022 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35068553

RESUMEN

The influence of polyamide 6 composite casings with silver-zinc crystals powder on some of the physicochemicalphysical-chemical, microbiological and sensory indicators of beef and chicken sausages during their storage was evaluated. Beef and chicken sausages were elaborated by using the conventional technology for sausage meat thin pasta; in each case, it was maintained a control batch to compare changes during the storage (4 and 12 °C, 75%-85% RH). To estimate the shelf life was considered sensory evaluation as a criterion for rejection. The results were processed as failure incomplete data via the Weibull distribution and it was admitted 5% of deteriorated units. It did not find a significant effect (p ≤ 0.05) due to the addition of silver-zinc crystals on the values of pH, aw, color, texture and sensory attributes of sausages, but did influence TBARS results, with lower values compared to control products. It reduced the counts of aerobic mesophilic microorganisms and lactic acid bacteria during the storage. The shelf life of chicken sausage was not affected at any storage temperature; while for the beef sausage stored at 4 °C, its shelf life increased in 9 days, although at 12 °C did not exist difference among treatments.

4.
Mol Ecol ; 31(5): 1416-1429, 2022 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34882855

RESUMEN

Spatial variation in climatic conditions along elevation gradients provides an important backdrop by which communities assemble and diversify. Lowland habitats tend to be connected through time, whereas highlands can be continuously or periodically isolated, conditions that have been hypothesized to promote high levels of species endemism. This tendency is expected to be accentuated among taxa that show niche conservatism within a given climatic envelope. While species distribution modeling approaches have allowed extensive exploration of niche conservatism among target taxa, a broad understanding of the phenomenon requires sampling of entire communities. Species-rich groups such as arthropods are ideal case studies for understanding ecological and biodiversity dynamics along elevational gradients given their important functional role in many ecosystems, but community-level studies have been limited due to their tremendous diversity. Here, we develop a novel semi-quantitative metabarcoding approach that combines specimen counts and size-sorting to characterize arthropod community-level diversity patterns along elevational transects on two different volcanoes of the island of Hawai'i. We found that arthropod communities between the two transects became increasingly distinct compositionally at higher elevations. Resistance surface approaches suggest that climatic differences between sampling localities are an important driver in shaping beta-diversity patterns, though the relative importance of climate varies across taxonomic groups. Nevertheless, the climatic niche position of OTUs between transects was highly correlated, suggesting that climatic filters shape the colonization between adjacent volcanoes. Taken together, our results highlight climatic niche conservatism as an important factor shaping ecological assembly along elevational gradients and suggest topographic complexity as an important driver of diversification.


Asunto(s)
Artrópodos , Altitud , Animales , Artrópodos/genética , Biodiversidad , Ecosistema , Hawaii
5.
Rev. Investig. Salud. Univ. Boyacá ; 9(2): 153-172, 20220000. tab, ilust
Artículo en Español | LILACS, COLNAL | ID: biblio-1445039

RESUMEN

Introducción: En los últimos años, el sector de la construcción en Colombia se ha ubicado en el cuarto lugar entre los sectores económicos con mayor accidentalidad. Las cifras indican que de los 1233 accidentes laborales en el país, 156 pertenecían a este sector. La capacitación en seguridad y salud en el trabajo desempeña un papel funda-mental para reducir los índices de accidentalidad. Objetivo: Mencionar algunas estrategias y herramientas digitales actualizadas para la capacitación en seguridad y salud en el trabajo en el sector de la construcción. Método: Revisión teórico-descriptiva de tipo documental. Algunas bases de datos consultadas fueron: Medline, ScienceDirect, Scopus, SciELO, Proquest y Pubmed. Como criterio de selección se incluyeron artículos en inglés y español a partir del 2015 y algunos anteriores como referentes históricos. De más de 80 trabajos consultados, 53 cumplieron con los criterios de inclusión; además, se validó cada descriptor en ciencias de la salud (Decs). Conclusiones: Existen diferentes estrategias y herramientas que podrían usarse para la capacitación en riesgos laborales, que van desde las actividades lúdicas, pasando por herramientas digitales, hasta estrategias de participación activa del trabajador que permitan una mayor concientización y apropiación del conocimiento en materia de seguridad, que incentiven la aplicación de prácticas seguras, teniendo en cuenta su contexto crítico de accidentalidad


Introduction: In recent years, the construction sector in Colombia, has ranked fourth among the economic sectors with the highest accident rates in the country, figures indicate that of the 1233 occupational accidents in Colombia, 156 belong to the construction sector. Occupational health and safety training plays a fundamental role in reducing accident rates. Objective: To mention some updated strategies and digital tools for training in occupational safety and health in the construction sector. Method: Theoretical and descriptive documentary review. Some databases consulted were Medline, ScienceDirect, Scopus, SciELO, Proquest and Pubmed. As a selection criterion, articles in English and Spanish from 2015 and some previous ones were included as historical references. Of more than 60 papers consulted, 53 met the inclusion criteria, in addition, each Descriptor in Health Sciences (DeCS) was validated. Conclusions: There are different strategies and tools that could be used for training in occupational hazards, ranging from playful activities, digital tools and strategies of active worker participation that allow greater awareness and appropriation of knowledge on safety, encouraging the application of safe practices taking into account their critical context of accident rate.


Introdução: Nos últimos anos, o setor de construção na Colômbia ocupou o quarto lugar entre os setores econômicos com maior índice de acidentes. Os números indicam que dos 1233 acidentes de trabalho ocorridos no país, 156 ocorreram neste setor. O treinamento em segurança e saúde ocupa-cional tem um papel fundamental na redução das taxas de acidentes. Objetivo: Mencionar algumas estratégias e ferramentas digitais atualizadas para o treinamento em segurança e saúde ocupacional no setor de construção. Método: Revisão teórico-descritiva de tipo documental. Alguns bancos de dados consultados foram: Medline, ScienceDirect, Scopus, SciELO, Proquest e Pubmed. Os critérios de seleção incluíram artigos em inglês e espanhol a partir de 2015 e alguns artigos anteriores como referentes históricas. Dos mais de 80 artigos consultados, 53 preenchiam os critérios de inclusão; além disso, foi validada cada pala-vra-chave nos descritores em ciências da saúde (Decs). Conclusões: Existem diferentes estratégias e ferramentas que poderiam ser utilizadas para o treina-mento sobre riscos ocupacionais, desde atividades lúdicas, passando por ferramentas digitais, até es-tratégias de participação ativa dos trabalhadores que permitem maior conscientização e apropriação de conhecimentos sobre segurança, que incentivam a aplicação de práticas seguras, levando em conta seu contexto critico de acidentes


Asunto(s)
Tutoría , Seguridad , Trabajo , Aplicaciones de la Informática Médica , Industria de la Construcción , Salud
6.
Mol Ecol Resour ; 21(8): 2782-2800, 2021 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34569715

RESUMEN

Biodiversity accumulates hierarchically by means of ecological and evolutionary processes and feedbacks. Within ecological communities drift, dispersal, speciation, and selection operate simultaneously to shape patterns of biodiversity. Reconciling the relative importance of these is hindered by current models and inference methods, which tend to focus on a subset of processes and their resulting predictions. Here we introduce massive ecoevolutionary synthesis simulations (MESS), a unified mechanistic model of community assembly, rooted in classic island biogeography theory, which makes temporally explicit joint predictions across three biodiversity data axes: (i) species richness and abundances, (ii) population genetic diversities, and (iii) trait variation in a phylogenetic context. Using simulations we demonstrate that each data axis captures information at different timescales, and that integrating these axes enables discriminating among previously unidentifiable community assembly models. MESS is unique in generating predictions of community-scale genetic diversity, and in characterizing joint patterns of genetic diversity, abundance, and trait values. MESS unlocks the full potential for investigation of biodiversity processes using multidimensional community data including a genetic component, such as might be produced by contemporary eDNA or metabarcoding studies. We combine MESS with supervised machine learning to fit the parameters of the model to real data and infer processes underlying how biodiversity accumulates, using communities of tropical trees, arthropods, and gastropods as case studies that span a range of data availability scenarios, and spatial and taxonomic scales.


Asunto(s)
Biodiversidad , Modelos Biológicos , Biota , Variación Genética , Filogenia
7.
Evolution ; 75(2): 231-244, 2021 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33078844

RESUMEN

Montane cloud forests are areas of high endemism, and are one of the more vulnerable terrestrial ecosystems to climate change. Thus, understanding how they both contribute to the generation of biodiversity, and will respond to ongoing climate change, are important and related challenges. The widely accepted model for montane cloud forest dynamics involves upslope forcing of their range limits with global climate warming. However, limited climate data provides some support for an alternative model, where range limits are forced downslope with climate warming. Testing between these two models is challenging, due to the inherent limitations of climate and pollen records. We overcome this with an alternative source of historical information, testing between competing model predictions using genomic data and demographic analyses for a species of beetle tightly associated to an oceanic island cloud forest. Results unequivocally support the alternative model: populations that were isolated at higher elevation peaks during the Last Glacial Maximum are now in contact and hybridizing at lower elevations. Our results suggest that genomic data are a rich source of information to further understand how montane cloud forest biodiversity originates, and how it is likely to be impacted by ongoing climate change.


Asunto(s)
Cambio Climático , Escarabajos/genética , Bosques , Especiación Genética , Hibridación Genética , Altitud , Animales , Biodiversidad , ADN Mitocondrial , Genoma de los Insectos , Modelos Biológicos , España
8.
Ecol Evol ; 10(16): 8959-8975, 2020 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32884671

RESUMEN

The dispersal routes of taxa with transoceanic disjunctions remain poorly understood, with the potential roles of Antarctica not yet demonstrated. Mosses are suitable organisms to test direct intra-Antarctic dispersal, as major component of the extant Antarctic flora, with the cosmopolitan moss Bryum argenteum as ideal target species. We analyzed the genetic structure of B. argenteum to provide an evolutionary time frame for its radiation and shed light into its historical biogeography in the Antarctic region. We tested two alternative scenarios: (a) intra-Antarctic panmixia and (b) intra-Antarctic genetic differentiation. Furthermore, we tested for evidence of the existence of specific intra-Antarctic dispersal routes. Sixty-seven new samples (40 collected in Antarctica) were sequenced for ITS nrDNA and rps4 cpDNA regions, and phylogenetic trees of B. argenteum were constructed, with a focus on its Southern Hemisphere. Combining our new nrDNA dataset with previously published datasets, we estimated time-calibrated phylogenies based on two different substitution rates (derived from angiosperms and bryophytes) along with ancestral area estimations. Minimum spanning network and pairwise genetic distances were also calculated. B. argenteum was potentially distributed across Africa and Antarctica soon after its origin. Its earliest intra-Antarctic dispersal and diversification occurred during a warming period in the Pliocene. On the same timescale, a radiation took place involving a dispersal event from Antarctica to the sub-Antarctic islands. A more recent event of dispersal and diversification within Antarctica occurred during a warm period in the Pleistocene, creating favorable conditions also for its colonization outside the Antarctic continent worldwide. We provide evidence supporting the hypothesis that contemporary populations of B. argenteum in Antarctica integrate a history of both multiple long-range dispersal events and local persistence combined with in situ diversification. Our data support the hypothesis that B. argenteum has been characterized by strong connectivity within Antarctica, suggesting the existence of intra-Antarctic dispersal routes.

9.
Ecol Lett ; 23(2): 305-315, 2020 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31762170

RESUMEN

Geographic isolation substantially contributes to species endemism on oceanic islands when speciation involves the colonisation of a new island. However, less is understood about the drivers of speciation within islands. What is lacking is a general understanding of the geographic scale of gene flow limitation within islands, and thus the spatial scale and drivers of geographical speciation within insular contexts. Using a community of beetle species, we show that when dispersal ability and climate tolerance are restricted, microclimatic variation over distances of only a few kilometres can maintain strong geographic isolation extending back several millions of years. Further to this, we demonstrate congruent diversification with gene flow across species, mediated by Quaternary climate oscillations that have facilitated a dynamic of isolation and secondary contact. The unprecedented scale of parallel species responses to a common environmental driver for evolutionary change has profound consequences for understanding past and future species responses to climate variation.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Clima , Flujo Génico , Especiación Genética , Geografía , Islas , Océanos y Mares , Filogenia
10.
PLoS One ; 14(2): e0211017, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30759110

RESUMEN

Biogeography, systematics and taxonomy are complementary scientific disciplines. To understand a species' origin, migration routes, distribution and evolutionary history, it is first necessary to establish its taxonomic boundaries. Here, we use an integrative approach that takes advantage of complementary disciplines to resolve an intriguing scientific question. Populations of an unknown moss found in the Canary Islands (Tenerife Island) resembled two different Californian endemic species: Orthotrichum shevockii and O. kellmanii. To determine whether this moss belongs to either of these species and, if so, to explain its presence on this distant oceanic island, we combined the evaluation of morphological qualitative characters, statistical morphometric analyses of quantitative traits, and molecular phylogenetic inferences. Our results suggest that the two Californian mosses are conspecific, and that the Canarian populations belong to this putative species, with only one taxon thus involved. Orthotrichum shevockii (the priority name) is therefore recognized as a morphologically variable species that exhibits a transcontinental disjunction between western North America and the Canary Islands. Within its distribution range, the area of occupancy is limited, a notable feature among bryophytes at the intraspecific level. To explain this disjunction, divergence time and ancestral area estimation analyses are carried out and further support the hypothesis of a long-distance dispersal event from California to Tenerife Island.


Asunto(s)
Bryopsida/clasificación , Evolución Molecular , Filogenia , California , Clasificación , Filogeografía , Análisis de Secuencia de ADN , España
11.
12.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 127: 606-612, 2018 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29890223

RESUMEN

A latitudinal diversity gradient towards the tropics appears as one most recurrent patterns in ecology, but the mechanisms underlying this pattern remain an area of controversy. In angiosperms, the tropical conservatism hypothesis proposes that most groups originated in the tropics and are adapted to a tropical climatic regime, and that relatively few species have evolved physiological adaptations to cold, dry or unpredictable climates. This mechanism is, however, unlikely to apply across land plants, and in particular, to liverworts, a group of about 7500 species, whose ability to withstand cold much better than their tracheophyte counterparts is at odds with the tropical conservatism hypothesis. Molecular dating, diversification rate analyses and ancestral area reconstructions were employed to explore the evolutionary mechanisms that account for the latitudinal diversity gradient in liverworts. As opposed to angiosperms, tropical liverwort genera are not older than their extra-tropical counterparts (median stem age of tropical and extra-tropical liverwort genera of 24.35 ±â€¯39.65 Ma and 39.57 ±â€¯49.07 Ma, respectively), weakening the 'time for speciation hypothesis'. Models of ancestral area reconstructions with equal migration rates between tropical and extra-tropical regions outperformed models with asymmetrical migration rates in either direction. The symmetry and intensity of migrations between tropical and extra-tropical regions suggested by the lack of resolution in ancestral area reconstructions towards the deepest nodes are at odds with the tropical niche conservatism hypothesis. In turn, tropical genera exhibited significantly higher net diversification rates than extra-tropical ones, suggesting that the observed latitudinal diversity gradient results from either higher extinction rates in extra-tropical lineages or higher speciation rates in the tropics. We discuss a series of experiments to help deciphering the underlying evolutionary mechanisms.


Asunto(s)
Biodiversidad , Evolución Biológica , Hepatophyta/anatomía & histología , Funciones de Verosimilitud , Filogenia , Filogeografía , Clima Tropical
13.
Trends Ecol Evol ; 33(7): 488-491, 2018 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29731151

RESUMEN

Anagenesis and cladogenesis are fundamental evolutionary concepts, but are increasingly being adopted as speciation models in the field of island biogeography. Here, we review the origin of the terms 'anagenetic' and 'cladogenetic' speciation, critique their utility, and finally suggest alternative terminology that better describes the geographical relationships of insular sister species.


Asunto(s)
Ecología , Especiación Genética , Plantas/genética , Terminología como Asunto , Evolución Biológica , Islas
14.
New Phytol ; 218(2): 859-872, 2018 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29468683

RESUMEN

Morphometrics, the assignment of quantities to biological shapes, is a powerful tool to address taxonomic, evolutionary, functional and developmental questions. We propose a novel method for shape quantification of complex modular architecture in thalloid plants, whose extremely reduced morphologies, combined with the lack of a formal framework for thallus description, have long rendered taxonomic and evolutionary studies extremely challenging. Using graph theory, thalli are described as hierarchical series of nodes and edges, allowing for accurate, homologous and repeatable measurements of widths, lengths and angles. The computer program MorphoSnake was developed to extract the skeleton and contours of a thallus and automatically acquire, at each level of organization, width, length, angle and sinuosity measurements. Through the quantification of leaf architecture in Hymenophyllum ferns (Polypodiopsida) and a fully worked example of integrative taxonomy in the taxonomically challenging thalloid liverwort genus Riccardia, we show that MorphoSnake is applicable to all ramified plants. This new possibility of acquiring large numbers of quantitative traits in plants with complex modular architectures opens new perspectives of applications, from the development of rapid species identification tools to evolutionary analyses of adaptive plasticity.


Asunto(s)
Plantas/anatomía & histología , Hepatophyta/anatomía & histología , Hojas de la Planta/anatomía & histología , Análisis de Componente Principal , Programas Informáticos , Especificidad de la Especie
15.
Ecol Evol ; 8(23): 11484-11491, 2018 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30598750

RESUMEN

Dispersal is a fundamental biological process that can be divided into three phases: release, transportation, and deposition. Determining the mechanisms of diaspore release is of prime importance to understand under which climatic conditions and at which frequency diaspores are released and transported. In mosses, wherein spore dispersal takes place through the hygroscopic movements of the peristome, the factors enhancing spore release has received little attention. Here, we determine the levels of relative humidity (RH) at which peristome movements are induced, contrasting the response of species with perfect (fully developed) and specialized (reduced) peristomes. All nine investigated species with perfect peristomes displayed a xerochastic behavior, initiating a closing movement from around 50%-65% RH upon increasing humidity and an opening movement from around 90% RH upon drying. Five of the seven species with specialized peristomes exhibited a hygrochastic behavior, initiating an opening movement under increasing RH (from about 80%) and a closing movement upon drying (from about 90%). These differences between species with hygrochastic and xerochastic peristomes suggest that spore dispersal does not randomly occur regardless of the prevailing climate conditions, which can impact their dispersal distances. In species with xerochastic peristomes, the release of spores under decreasing RH can be interpreted as an adaptive mechanism to disperse spores under optimal conditions for long-distance wind dispersal. In species with hygrochastic peristomes, conversely, the release of spores under wet conditions, which decreases their wind long-distance dispersal capacities, might be seen as a safe-site strategy, forcing spores to land in appropriate (micro-) habitats where their survival is favored. Significant variations were observed in the RH thresholds triggering peristome movements among species, especially in those with hygrochastic peristomes, raising the question of what mechanisms are responsible for such differences.

16.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 106: 73-85, 2017 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27664347

RESUMEN

Why some species exhibit larger geographical ranges than others, and to what extent does variation in range size affect diversification rates, remains a fundamental, but largely unanswered question in ecology and evolution. Here, we implement phylogenetic comparative analyses and ancestral area estimations in Radula, a liverwort genus of Cretaceous origin, to investigate the mechanisms that explain differences in geographical range size and diversification rates among lineages. Range size was phylogenetically constrained in the two sub-genera characterized by their almost complete Australasian and Neotropical endemicity, respectively. The congruence between the divergence time of these lineages and continental split suggests that plate tectonics could have played a major role in their present distribution, suggesting that a strong imprint of vicariance can still be found in extant distribution patterns in these highly mobile organisms. Amentuloradula, Volutoradula and Metaradula species did not appear to exhibit losses of dispersal capacities in terms of dispersal life-history traits, but evidence for significant phylogenetic signal in macroecological niche traits suggests that niche conservatism accounts for their restricted geographic ranges. Despite their greatly restricted distribution to Australasia and Neotropics respectively, Amentuloradula and Volutoradula did not exhibit significantly lower diversification rates than more widespread lineages, in contrast with the hypothesis that the probability of speciation increases with range size by promoting geographic isolation and increasing the rate at which novel habitats are encountered. We suggest that stochastic long-distance dispersal events may balance allele frequencies across large spatial scales, leading to low genetic structure among geographically distant areas or even continents, ultimately decreasing the diversification rates in highly mobile, widespread lineages.


Asunto(s)
Hepatophyta/clasificación , Biodiversidad , Evolución Biológica , Ecosistema , Fenotipo , Filogenia , Filogeografía
17.
Mol Ecol ; 25(21): 5568-5584, 2016 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27661065

RESUMEN

Paleontological evidence and current patterns of angiosperm species richness suggest that European biota experienced more severe bottlenecks than North American ones during the last glacial maximum. How well this pattern fits other plant species is less clear. Bryophytes offer a unique opportunity to contrast the impact of the last glacial maximum in North America and Europe because about 60% of the European bryoflora is shared with North America. Here, we use population genetic analyses based on approximate Bayesian computation on eight amphi-Atlantic species to test the hypothesis that North American populations were less impacted by the last glacial maximum, exhibiting higher levels of genetic diversity than European ones and ultimately serving as a refugium for the postglacial recolonization of Europe. In contrast with this hypothesis, the best-fit demographic model involved similar patterns of population size contractions, comparable levels of genetic diversity and balanced migration rates between European and North American populations. Our results thus suggest that bryophytes have experienced comparable demographic glacial histories on both sides of the Atlantic. Although a weak, but significant genetic structure was systematically recovered between European and North American populations, evidence for migration from and towards both continents suggests that amphi-Atlantic bryophyte population may function as a metapopulation network. Reconstructing the biogeographic history of either North American or European bryophyte populations therefore requires a large, trans-Atlantic geographic framework.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Briófitas/clasificación , Variación Genética , Genética de Población , Teorema de Bayes , Briófitas/genética , Europa (Continente) , Cubierta de Hielo , América del Norte , Filogenia , Dispersión de las Plantas , Densidad de Población
18.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 105: 139-145, 2016 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27530707

RESUMEN

As opposed to angiosperms, moss species richness is similar among tropical regions of the world, in line with the hypothesis that tropical bryophytes are extremely good dispersers. Here, we reconstructed the phylogeny of the pantropical moss genus Pelekium to test the hypothesis that high migration rates erase any difference in species richness among tropical regions. In contrast with this hypothesis, several species considered to have a pantropical range were resolved as a complex of species with a strong geographic structure. Consequently, a significant phylogeographical signal was found in the data, evidencing that cladogenetic diversification within regions takes place at a faster rate than intercontinental migration. The shape of the Pelekium phylogeny, along with the selection of a constant-rate model of diversification among species in the genus, suggests, however, that the cladogenetic speciation patterns observed in Pelekium are not comparable to some of the spectacular examples of tropical radiations reported in angiosperms. Rather, the results presented here point to the constant accumulation of diversity through time in Pelekium. This, combined with evidence for long-distance dispersal limitations in the genus, suggests that the similar patterns of species richness among tropical areas are better explained in terms of comparable rates of diversification across tropical regions than by the homogenization of species richness by recurrent migrations.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Briófitas/clasificación , Briófitas/genética , Especiación Genética , Magnoliopsida/clasificación , Filogenia , Filogeografía
19.
Sci Rep ; 6: 29156, 2016 07 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27377592

RESUMEN

Oceanic islands are of fundamental importance for the conservation of biodiversity because they exhibit high endemism rates coupled with fast extinction rates. Nowhere in Europe is this pattern more conspicuous than in the Macaronesian biogeographic region. A large network of protected areas within the region has been developed, but the question of whether these areas will still be climatically suitable for the globally threatened endemic element in the coming decades remains open. Here, we make predictions on the fate of the Macaronesian endemic bryophyte flora in the context of ongoing climate change. The potential distribution of 35 Macaronesian endemic bryophyte species was assessed under present and future climate conditions using an ensemble modelling approach. Projections of the models under different climate change scenarios predicted an average decrease of suitable areas of 62-87% per species and a significant elevational increase by 2070, so that even the commonest species were predicted to fit either the Vulnerable or Endangered IUCN categories. Complete extinctions were foreseen for six of the studied Macaronesian endemic species. Given the uncertainty regarding the capacity of endemic species to track areas of suitable climate within and outside the islands, active management associated to an effective monitoring program is suggested.


Asunto(s)
Briófitas/fisiología , Cambio Climático , Islas , Europa (Continente) , Océanos y Mares , Especificidad de la Especie , Temperatura
20.
Ann Bot ; 118(2): 197-206, 2016 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27296133

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The settling velocity of diaspores is a key parameter for the measurement of dispersal ability in wind-dispersed plants and one of the most relevant parameters in explicit dispersal models, but remains largely undocumented in bryophytes. The settling velocities of moss spores were measured and it was determined whether settling velocities can be derived from spore diameter using Stokes' Law or if specific traits of spore ornamentation cause departures from theoretical expectations. METHODS: A fall tower design combined with a high-speed camera was used to document spore settling velocities in nine moss species selected to cover the range of spore diameters within the group. Linear mixed effect models were employed to determine whether settling velocity can be predicted from spore diameter, taking specific variation in shape and surface roughness into account. KEY RESULTS: Average settling velocity of moss spores ranged from 0·49 to 8·52 cm s(-1) There was a significant positive relationship between spore settling velocity and size, but the inclusion of variables of shape and texture of spores in the best-fit models provides evidence for their role in shaping spore settling velocities. CONCLUSIONS: Settling velocities in mosses can significantly depart from expectations derived from Stokes' Law. We suggest that variation in spore shape and ornamentation affects the balance between density and drag, and results in different dispersal capacities, which may be correlated with different life-history traits or ecological requirements. Further studies on spore ultrastructure would be necessary to determine the role of complex spore ornamentation patterns in the drag-to-mass ratio and ultimately identify what is the still poorly understood function of the striking and highly variable ornamentation patterns of the perine layer on moss spores.


Asunto(s)
Briófitas/fisiología , Dispersión de las Plantas , Modelos Biológicos , Esporas , Viento
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