Allopatric speciation is more prevalent than parapatric ecological divergence in a recent high-Andean diversification (Linochilus: Asteraceae)

PeerJ. 2023 Jun 9:11:e15479. doi: 10.7717/peerj.15479. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Elucidating how species accumulate in diversity hotspots is an ongoing debate in evolutionary biology. The páramo, in the Northern Andes, has remarkably high indices of plant diversity, endemicity, and diversification rates. A hypothesis for explaining such indices is that allopatric speciation is high in the páramo given its island-like distribution. An alternative hypothesis is that the altitudinal gradient of the Andean topography provides a variety of niches that drive vertical parapatric ecological speciation. A formal test for evaluating the relative roles of allopatric and parapatric ecological speciation is lacking. The main aim of our study is to test which kind of speciation is more common in an endemic páramo genus. We developed a framework incorporating phylogenetics, species' distributions, and a morpho-ecological trait (leaf area) to compare sister species and infer whether allopatric or parapatric ecological divergence caused their speciation. We applied our framework to the species-rich genus Linochilus (63 spp.) and found that the majority of recent speciation events in it (12 events, 80%) have been driven by allopatric speciation, while a smaller fraction (one event, 6.7%) is attributed to parapatric ecological speciation; two pairs of sister species produced inconclusive results (13.3%). We conclude that páramo autochthonous (in-situ) diversification has been primarily driven by allopatric speciation.

Keywords: Allopatric speciation; Andean páramo; Diversification; Linochilus; Parapatric ecological divergence.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Asteraceae*
  • Biological Evolution
  • Phenotype
  • Plant Leaves

Grants and funding

Financial support was provided by The University of Texas at Austin (Plant Biology Program Awards, the C. L. Lundell Chair of Systematic Botany, The Linda Escobar Award), the Garden Club of America (2012 Award in Tropical Botany), and the Smithsonian Institution (Cuatrecasas Award, 2006). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.