Abstract
The Andes are a major dispersal barrier for lowland rain forest plants and animals, yet hundreds of lowland tree species are distributed on both sides of the northern Andes, raising questions about how the Andes influenced their biogeographic histories and population genetic structure. To explore these questions, we generated standardized datasets of thousands of SNPs from paired populations of 49 tree species co-distributed in rain forest tree communities located in Panama and Amazonian Ecuador and calculated genetic diversity (π) and absolute genetic divergence (dXY) within and between populations, respectively. We predicted (1) higher genetic diversity in the ancestral source region (east or west of the Andes) for each taxon and (2) correlation of genetic statistics with species attributes, including elevational range and life-history strategy. We found that genetic diversity was higher in putative ancestral source regions, possibly reflecting founder events during colonization. We found little support for a relationship between genetic divergence and species attributes except that species with higher elevational range limits exhibited higher dXY, implying older divergence times. One possible explanation for this pattern is that dispersal through mountain passes declined in importance relative to dispersal via alternative lowland routes as the Andes experienced uplift. We found no difference in mean genetic diversity between populations in Central America and the Amazon. Overall, our results suggest that dispersal across the Andes has left enduring signatures in the genetic structure of widespread rain forest trees. We outline additional hypotheses to be tested with species-specific case studies.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e13303 |
Journal | Biotropica |
Volume | 56 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 22 Feb 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2024 The Authors. Biotropica published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation.
Funding
We thank N. Wei for assistance with fieldwork in Panama and O.M. Vargas for guidance with figure preparation. Funding was provided by the National Science Foundation (DEB 1240869 and FESD Type I 1338694 to CWD), and the University of Michigan Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Rackham Graduate School. Graduate‐student support was provided to JBB by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (Postgraduate Scholarship M; CGSM‐410253‐2011) and the National Science Foundation (Graduate Research Fellowship Program). We are grateful to fieldworkers who have assisted in characterizing the taxonomic complexity of the Yasuní Forest Plot, in particular G. Villa, P. Alvia, M. Bass, and R. Foster. Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador has supported the Yasuní Forest Plot since it was established in 1995. Botanical collections and voucher specimens from Yasuní were made possible with collecting permits granted by the Ecuadorian Ministry of Environment (MAE).
Funders | Funder number |
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University of Michigan Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Rackham Graduate School | |
National Science Foundation | DEB 1240869, 1338694 |
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada | CGSM‐410253‐2011 |
Keywords
- Andes
- comparative biogeography
- dispersal barrier
- genetic diversity
- neotropical rain forest trees
- population genomics