What explains high plant richness in East Asia? Time and diversification in the tribe Lysimachieae (Primulaceae)

What causes the disparity in biodiversity among regions is a fundamental question in biogeography, ecology, and evolutionary biology. Evolutionary and biogeographic processes (speciation, extinction, dispersal) directly determine species richness patterns, and can be studied using integrative phylog...

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Veröffentlicht in:The New phytologist 2018-07, Vol.219 (1), p.436-448
Hauptverfasser: Yan, Hai‐Fei, Zhang, Cai‐Yun, Anderberg, Arne A., Hao, Gang, Ge, Xue‐Jun, Wiens, John J.
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container_end_page 448
container_issue 1
container_start_page 436
container_title The New phytologist
container_volume 219
creator Yan, Hai‐Fei
Zhang, Cai‐Yun
Anderberg, Arne A.
Hao, Gang
Ge, Xue‐Jun
Wiens, John J.
description What causes the disparity in biodiversity among regions is a fundamental question in biogeography, ecology, and evolutionary biology. Evolutionary and biogeographic processes (speciation, extinction, dispersal) directly determine species richness patterns, and can be studied using integrative phylogenetic approaches. However, the strikingly high richness of East Asia relative to other Northern Hemisphere regions remains poorly understood from this perspective. Here, for the first time, we test two general hypotheses (older colonization time, faster diversification rate) to explain this pattern, using the plant tribe Lysimachieae (Primulaceae) as a model system. We generated a new time-calibrated phylogeny for Lysimachieae (13 genes, 126 species), to estimate colonization times and diversification rates for each region and to test the relative importance of these two factors for explaining regional richness patterns. We find that neither time nor diversification rates alone explain richness patterns among regions in Lysimachieae. Instead, a new index that combines both factors explains global richness patterns in the group and their high East Asian biodiversity. Based on our results from Lysimachieae, we suggest that the high richness of plants in East Asia may be explained by a combination of older colonization times and faster diversification rates in this region.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/nph.15144
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Time and diversification in the tribe Lysimachieae (Primulaceae)</title><source>Jstor Complete Legacy</source><source>Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete</source><source>Wiley Online Library Free Content</source><source>EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals</source><creator>Yan, Hai‐Fei ; Zhang, Cai‐Yun ; Anderberg, Arne A. ; Hao, Gang ; Ge, Xue‐Jun ; Wiens, John J.</creator><creatorcontrib>Yan, Hai‐Fei ; Zhang, Cai‐Yun ; Anderberg, Arne A. ; Hao, Gang ; Ge, Xue‐Jun ; Wiens, John J.</creatorcontrib><description>What causes the disparity in biodiversity among regions is a fundamental question in biogeography, ecology, and evolutionary biology. Evolutionary and biogeographic processes (speciation, extinction, dispersal) directly determine species richness patterns, and can be studied using integrative phylogenetic approaches. 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subjects Biodiversity
Biogeography
Biological evolution
Biology
Colonization
Dispersal
Diversification
diversification rate
Genes
Lysimachieae
Northern Hemisphere
Phylogeny
Primulaceae
Regions
Speciation
Species extinction
Species richness
title What explains high plant richness in East Asia? Time and diversification in the tribe Lysimachieae (Primulaceae)
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