4.7 Article

Phylogeny and palaeoecology of Polyommatus blue butterflies show Beringia was a climate-regulated gateway to the New World

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 278, Issue 1719, Pages 2737-2744

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2010.2213

Keywords

Beringia; biogeography; climate change; Lycaenidae; Nabokov; phylogeny

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [CGL2007-60516/BOS]
  2. Fulbright Postdoctoral Fellowship
  3. Baker Foundation
  4. Harvard University
  5. Museum of Comparative Zoology
  6. NSF [DEB-0447242]
  7. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

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Transcontinental dispersals by organisms usually represent improbable events that constitute a major challenge for biogeographers. By integrating molecular phylogeny, historical biogeography and palaeoecology, we test a bold hypothesis proposed by Vladimir Nabokov regarding the origin of Neotropical Polyommatus blue butterflies, and show that Beringia has served as a biological corridor for the dispersal of these insects from Asia into the New World. We present a novel method to estimate ancestral temperature tolerances using distribution range limits of extant organisms, and find that climatic conditions in Beringia acted as a decisive filter in determining which taxa crossed into the New World during five separate invasions over the past 11 Myr. Our results reveal a marked effect of the Miocene-Pleistocene global cooling, and demonstrate that palaeoclimatic conditions left a strong signal on the ecology of present-day taxa in the New World. The phylogenetic conservatism in thermal tolerances that we have identified may permit the reconstruction of the palaeoecology of ancestral organisms, especially mobile taxa that can easily escape from hostile environments rather than adapt to them.

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