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Evaluating the Significance of Paleophylogeographic Species Distribution Models in Reconstructing Quaternary Range-Shifts of Nearctic Chelonians

The climatic cycles of the Quaternary, during which global mean annual temperatures have regularly changed by 5–10°C, provide a special opportunity for studying the rate, magnitude, and effects of geographic responses to changing climates. During the Quaternary, high- and mid-latitude species were e...

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Autores principales: Rödder, Dennis, Lawing, A. Michelle, Flecks, Morris, Ahmadzadeh, Faraham, Dambach, Johannes, Engler, Jan O., Habel, Jan Christian, Hartmann, Timo, Hörnes, David, Ihlow, Flora, Schidelko, Kathrin, Stiels, Darius, Polly, P. David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3794015/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24130664
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072855
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author Rödder, Dennis
Lawing, A. Michelle
Flecks, Morris
Ahmadzadeh, Faraham
Dambach, Johannes
Engler, Jan O.
Habel, Jan Christian
Hartmann, Timo
Hörnes, David
Ihlow, Flora
Schidelko, Kathrin
Stiels, Darius
Polly, P. David
author_facet Rödder, Dennis
Lawing, A. Michelle
Flecks, Morris
Ahmadzadeh, Faraham
Dambach, Johannes
Engler, Jan O.
Habel, Jan Christian
Hartmann, Timo
Hörnes, David
Ihlow, Flora
Schidelko, Kathrin
Stiels, Darius
Polly, P. David
author_sort Rödder, Dennis
collection PubMed
description The climatic cycles of the Quaternary, during which global mean annual temperatures have regularly changed by 5–10°C, provide a special opportunity for studying the rate, magnitude, and effects of geographic responses to changing climates. During the Quaternary, high- and mid-latitude species were extirpated from regions that were covered by ice or otherwise became unsuitable, persisting in refugial retreats where the environment was compatible with their tolerances. In this study we combine modern geographic range data, phylogeny, Pleistocene paleoclimatic models, and isotopic records of changes in global mean annual temperature, to produce a temporally continuous model of geographic changes in potential habitat for 59 species of North American turtles over the past 320 Ka (three full glacial-interglacial cycles). These paleophylogeographic models indicate the areas where past climates were compatible with the modern ranges of the species and serve as hypotheses for how their geographic ranges would have changed in response to Quaternary climate cycles. We test these hypotheses against physiological, genetic, taxonomic and fossil evidence, and we then use them to measure the effects of Quaternary climate cycles on species distributions. Patterns of range expansion, contraction, and fragmentation in the models are strongly congruent with (i) phylogeographic differentiation; (ii) morphological variation; (iii) physiological tolerances; and (iv) intraspecific genetic variability. Modern species with significant interspecific differentiation have geographic ranges that strongly fluctuated and repeatedly fragmented throughout the Quaternary. Modern species with low genetic diversity have geographic distributions that were highly variable and at times exceedingly small in the past. Our results reveal the potential for paleophylogeographic models to (i) reconstruct past geographic range modifications, (ii) identify geographic processes that result in genetic bottlenecks; and (iii) predict threats due to anthropogenic climate change in the future.
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spelling pubmed-37940152013-10-15 Evaluating the Significance of Paleophylogeographic Species Distribution Models in Reconstructing Quaternary Range-Shifts of Nearctic Chelonians Rödder, Dennis Lawing, A. Michelle Flecks, Morris Ahmadzadeh, Faraham Dambach, Johannes Engler, Jan O. Habel, Jan Christian Hartmann, Timo Hörnes, David Ihlow, Flora Schidelko, Kathrin Stiels, Darius Polly, P. David PLoS One Research Article The climatic cycles of the Quaternary, during which global mean annual temperatures have regularly changed by 5–10°C, provide a special opportunity for studying the rate, magnitude, and effects of geographic responses to changing climates. During the Quaternary, high- and mid-latitude species were extirpated from regions that were covered by ice or otherwise became unsuitable, persisting in refugial retreats where the environment was compatible with their tolerances. In this study we combine modern geographic range data, phylogeny, Pleistocene paleoclimatic models, and isotopic records of changes in global mean annual temperature, to produce a temporally continuous model of geographic changes in potential habitat for 59 species of North American turtles over the past 320 Ka (three full glacial-interglacial cycles). These paleophylogeographic models indicate the areas where past climates were compatible with the modern ranges of the species and serve as hypotheses for how their geographic ranges would have changed in response to Quaternary climate cycles. We test these hypotheses against physiological, genetic, taxonomic and fossil evidence, and we then use them to measure the effects of Quaternary climate cycles on species distributions. Patterns of range expansion, contraction, and fragmentation in the models are strongly congruent with (i) phylogeographic differentiation; (ii) morphological variation; (iii) physiological tolerances; and (iv) intraspecific genetic variability. Modern species with significant interspecific differentiation have geographic ranges that strongly fluctuated and repeatedly fragmented throughout the Quaternary. Modern species with low genetic diversity have geographic distributions that were highly variable and at times exceedingly small in the past. Our results reveal the potential for paleophylogeographic models to (i) reconstruct past geographic range modifications, (ii) identify geographic processes that result in genetic bottlenecks; and (iii) predict threats due to anthropogenic climate change in the future. Public Library of Science 2013-10-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3794015/ /pubmed/24130664 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072855 Text en © 2013 Rödder et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rödder, Dennis
Lawing, A. Michelle
Flecks, Morris
Ahmadzadeh, Faraham
Dambach, Johannes
Engler, Jan O.
Habel, Jan Christian
Hartmann, Timo
Hörnes, David
Ihlow, Flora
Schidelko, Kathrin
Stiels, Darius
Polly, P. David
Evaluating the Significance of Paleophylogeographic Species Distribution Models in Reconstructing Quaternary Range-Shifts of Nearctic Chelonians
title Evaluating the Significance of Paleophylogeographic Species Distribution Models in Reconstructing Quaternary Range-Shifts of Nearctic Chelonians
title_full Evaluating the Significance of Paleophylogeographic Species Distribution Models in Reconstructing Quaternary Range-Shifts of Nearctic Chelonians
title_fullStr Evaluating the Significance of Paleophylogeographic Species Distribution Models in Reconstructing Quaternary Range-Shifts of Nearctic Chelonians
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the Significance of Paleophylogeographic Species Distribution Models in Reconstructing Quaternary Range-Shifts of Nearctic Chelonians
title_short Evaluating the Significance of Paleophylogeographic Species Distribution Models in Reconstructing Quaternary Range-Shifts of Nearctic Chelonians
title_sort evaluating the significance of paleophylogeographic species distribution models in reconstructing quaternary range-shifts of nearctic chelonians
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3794015/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24130664
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072855
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