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Persistence and stability of Eastern Afromontane forests : evidence from brevicipitid frogs
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 2613034
Author(s) Loader, Simon P.; Ceccarelli, F. Sara; Menegon, Michele; Howell, Kim M.; Kassahun, Roman; Mengistu, Abebe A.; Saber, Samy A.; Gebresenbet, Fikirte; de Sa, Rafael; Davenport, Tim R. B.; Larson, Joanna G.; Mueller, Hendrik; Wilkinson, Mark; Gower, David J.
Author(s) at UniBasel Loader, Simon Paul
Year 2014
Title Persistence and stability of Eastern Afromontane forests : evidence from brevicipitid frogs
Journal Journal of biogeography
Volume 41
Number 9
Pages / Article-Number 1781-1792
Keywords Africa, ancestral area reconstruction, biogeography, Brevicipitidae, diversification models, diversification rates, Eastern Afromontane, forest persistence, phylogenetic diversity, radiation
Abstract Aim The persistence and stability of habitats through time are considered predictors of high levels of biodiversity in some environments. Long-term habitat persistence and stability may explain the species-rich, endemic forest fauna and flora of the Eastern Afromontane Biodiversity Region (EABR). Using complementary phylogenetic and biogeographical approaches, we examine evolutionary patterns in EABR brevicipitid frogs. Using these data, we test whether brevicipitid history reflects patterns of long-term forest persistence and/or stability across the EABR.Location East Africa.Methods A dated phylogeny for brevicipitids was constructed using two nuclear and three mitochondrial markers. Alternative diversification models were used to determine signal for constant or varying net diversification rates. Using our dated tree, we identified areas of high phylogenetic diversity (PD), and inferred ancestral areas using likelihood and Bayesian approaches.Results Brevicipitids have a long history, with generic diversification among extant lineages pre-dating the Oligocene (> 33 Ma). Ancestral-area reconstructions indicate the presence of brevicipitids in the EABR since the Oligocene, and support a scenario of palaeoendemics surviving in EABR refugia. Ancestral-area reconstructions indicate that the central Eastern Arc Mountains (EAM) formed the initial centre of diversification of forest brevicipitids. Measures of PD show that diversity varies across the EABR but is highest in the EAM. Constant net diversification rate in brevicipitids is a significantly better fit than alternative, rate-variable models.Main conclusions The degree of persistence of forest habitats appears to be a contributing factor to the varying levels of diversity across the EABR in brevicipitids (and other organisms). In contrast to the Southern Highlands and Ethiopian Bale Mountains, the EAM stands out as an area that enabled the constant accumulation of brevicipitid species over a long period of time.
Publisher Blackwell Scientific Publications
ISSN/ISBN 0305-0270
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A6271968
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1111/jbi.12331
ISI-Number WOS:000342055900014
Document type (ISI) Article
 
   

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