TY - JOUR
T1 - Lizards of the lost arcs
T2 - Mid-Cenozoic diversification, persistence and ecological marginalization in the west pacific
AU - Oliver, Paul M.
AU - Brown, Rafe M.
AU - Kraus, Fred
AU - Rittmeyer, Eric
AU - Travers, Scott L.
AU - Siler, Cameron D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2018/1/31
Y1 - 2018/1/31
N2 - Regions with complex geological histories often have diverse and highly endemic biotas, yet inferring the ecological and historical processes shaping this relationship remains challenging. Here, in the context of the taxon cycle model of insular community assembly,we investigate patterns of lineage diversity and habitat usage in a newly characterized vertebrate radiation centred upon the world’s most geologically complex insular region: island arcs spanning from the Philippines to Fiji. On island arcs taxa are ecologically widespread, and provide evidence to support one key prediction of the taxon cycle, specifically that interior habitats (lowland rainforests, montane habitats) are home to a greater number of older or relictual lineages than are peripheral habitats (coastal and open forests).Oncontinental fringes, however, the clade shows a disjunct distribution away from lowland rainforest, occurring in coastal, open or montane habitats. These results are consistent with a role for biotic interactions in shaping disjunct distributions (a central tenant of the taxon cycle), but we find this pattern most strongly on continental fringes not islands. Our results also suggest that peripheral habitats on islands, and especially island arcs, may be important for persistence and diversification, not just dispersal and colonization. Finally, new phylogenetic evidence for subaerial island archipelagos (with an associated biota) east of present-day Wallace’s Line since the Oligocene has important implications for understanding long-term biotic interchange and assembly across Asia and Australia.
AB - Regions with complex geological histories often have diverse and highly endemic biotas, yet inferring the ecological and historical processes shaping this relationship remains challenging. Here, in the context of the taxon cycle model of insular community assembly,we investigate patterns of lineage diversity and habitat usage in a newly characterized vertebrate radiation centred upon the world’s most geologically complex insular region: island arcs spanning from the Philippines to Fiji. On island arcs taxa are ecologically widespread, and provide evidence to support one key prediction of the taxon cycle, specifically that interior habitats (lowland rainforests, montane habitats) are home to a greater number of older or relictual lineages than are peripheral habitats (coastal and open forests).Oncontinental fringes, however, the clade shows a disjunct distribution away from lowland rainforest, occurring in coastal, open or montane habitats. These results are consistent with a role for biotic interactions in shaping disjunct distributions (a central tenant of the taxon cycle), but we find this pattern most strongly on continental fringes not islands. Our results also suggest that peripheral habitats on islands, and especially island arcs, may be important for persistence and diversification, not just dispersal and colonization. Finally, new phylogenetic evidence for subaerial island archipelagos (with an associated biota) east of present-day Wallace’s Line since the Oligocene has important implications for understanding long-term biotic interchange and assembly across Asia and Australia.
KW - Ecological evolution
KW - Island arcs
KW - Island biogeography
KW - Melanesia
KW - Montane relict
KW - Taxon cycle
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85040954139&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1098/rspb.2017.1760
DO - 10.1098/rspb.2017.1760
M3 - Article
SN - 0962-8452
VL - 285
JO - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
JF - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
IS - 1871
M1 - 20171760
ER -