Data from: A signature of dynamic biogeography: enclaves indicate past species replacement
Understanding how species have replaced each other in the past is important to predicting future species turnover. While past species replacement is difficult to detect after the fact, the process may be inferred from present-day distribution patterns. Species with abutting ranges sometimes show a c...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding how species have replaced each other in the past is
important to predicting future species turnover. While past species
replacement is difficult to detect after the fact, the process may be
inferred from present-day distribution patterns. Species with abutting
ranges sometimes show a characteristic distribution pattern, where a
section of one species range is enveloped by that of the other. Such an
enclave could indicate past species replacement: when a species is partly
supplanted by a competitor, but a population endures locally while the
invading species moves around and past it, an enclave forms. If the two
species hybridize and backcross, the receding species is predicted to
leave genetic traces within the expanding one under a scenario of species
replacement. By screening dozens of genes in hybridizing crested newts, we
uncover genetic remnants of the ancestral species, now inhabiting an
enclave, in the range of the surrounding invading species. This
independent genetic evidence supports the past distribution dynamics we
predicted from the enclave. We suggest that enclaves provide a valuable
tool in understanding historical species replacement, which is important
because a major conservation concern arising from anthropogenic climate
change is increased species replacement in the future. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.9k1h0 |