Acoustic and morphological dataset of seven anuran populations of two species from highland forests in Northeastern Brazil
Highlands are of paramount importance to the study of evolution as they are frequently implicated in historical and ecological processes that generate and maintain biological diversity. In northeastern Brazil, sparse rainforest remnants are located in highlands north of the São Francisco River, gene...
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Zusammenfassung: | Highlands are of paramount importance to the study of evolution as they
are frequently implicated in historical and ecological processes that
generate and maintain biological diversity. In northeastern Brazil, sparse
rainforest remnants are located in highlands north of the São Francisco
River, generally surrounded by the dry and open landscape of the Caatinga
biome. Earlier studies suggest that these forests acted as historical
refuges to the rainforest fauna and flora, especially during the climatic
cycles of the Pleistocene. However, it is still unclear whether
populations distributed in distinct highlands experienced phenotypic
differentiation as a result of adaptation to the environmental conditions
of each forest remnant. In this study, we used two frog species with wide
geographic distributions, Dendropsophus oliveirai, a habitat specialist
which breeds in permanent ponds, and Physalaemus cuvieri, a habitat
generalist which breeds in temporary and permanent lentic environments, as
models to investigate the relationships between environmental variation,
geographic, genetic, and body size distance with advertisement call
variation among populations inhabiting different highlands. We
hypothesized that call variation would be strongly influenced by local
environmental conditions, as sound signals are frequently adapted to the
transmission environment. Our results indicate that acoustic variation
among P. cuvieri populations is strongly influenced by environmental
variation and moderate by geographic distance. In D. oliveirai, the
environment is also the most influential factor in acoustic variation,
followed by genetic and morphological variation. Besides that, the
association between environmental and geographic factors suggests an
indirect effect of geographic distance on acoustic variation in both
species through an environmental gradient and also in genetic traits of
the habitat specialist species. We believe that selective processes and
isolation possibly act together in driving interpopulational acoustic
variation with habitat-specific species being more affected by the
isolation in suitable habitats. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.5x69p8d95 |