Data from: Divergent trait and environment relationships among parallel radiations in Pelargonium (Geraniaceae): a role for evolutionary legacy?
Functional traits in closely related lineages are expected to vary similarly along common environmental gradients due to shared evolutionary and biogeographic history, or legacy effects, and due to biophysical tradeoffs in construction. We test these predictions in Pelargonium, a relatively recent e...
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Zusammenfassung: | Functional traits in closely related lineages are expected to vary
similarly along common environmental gradients due to shared evolutionary
and biogeographic history, or legacy effects, and due to biophysical
tradeoffs in construction. We test these predictions in Pelargonium, a
relatively recent evolutionary radiation. Bayesian phylogenetic mixed
effects models assessed, at the subclade level, associations between plant
height, leaf area, leaf nitrogen content and leaf mass per area (LMA), and
five environmental variables capturing temperature and rainfall gradients
across the Greater Cape Floristic Region of South Africa. Trait-trait
integration was assessed via pairwise-correlations within subclades. Of 20
trait-environment associations, 17 differed among subclades. Signs of
regression coefficients diverged for height, leaf area and leaf nitrogen
content, but not for LMA. Subclades also differed in trait-trait
relationships and these differences were modulated by rainfall
seasonality. Leave-one-out cross-validation revealed that whether trait
variation was better predicted by environmental predictors or trait-trait
integration depended on the clade and trait in question. Legacy signals in
trait-environment and trait-trait relationships were apparently lost
during the earliest diversification of Pelargonium, but then retained
during subsequent subclade evolution. Overall, we demonstrate that
global-scale patterns are poor predictors of patterns of trait variation
at finer geographic and taxonomic scales. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1fp6487 |