4.4 Article

Biogeographic diversification in Nolana (Solanaceae), a ubiquitous member of the Atacama and Peruvian Deserts along the western coast of South America

Journal

JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATICS AND EVOLUTION
Volume 47, Issue 5, Pages 457-476

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1759-6831.2009.00040.x

Keywords

Atacama Desert; biogeography; chloroplast DNA; LEAFY second intron; Nolana; Peruvian Desert; Solanaceae; South America

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB 0415573, DEB 9801297, DEB 8513205]
  2. National Geographic Society
  3. Pritzker Laboratory for Molecular Systematics and Evolution of the Field Museum
  4. National Museum of Natural History
  5. Smithsonian Institution

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The present paper reconstructs the biogeographic diversification for Nolana L.f. (Solanaceae), a genus of 89 endemic species largely restricted to fog-dependent desert lomas formations of coastal Peru and Chile. Previous efforts have reconstructed a phylogenetic estimate for Nolana using a combination of molecular markers. Herein, we expand on those results to examine hypotheses of biogeographic origins and diversification patterns. Nolana occupies habitats within a continuous coastal desert and forms a terrestrial archipelago of discrete islands unique in size, topography, and species composition. Each locality contains at least one Nolana species and many contain multiple species in sympatry. The genus has a Chilean origin, with the basal clades confined to Chile with wide geographic and ecological distributions. Peru contains two strongly supported clades, suggesting two introductions with subsequent radiation. A Chilean clade of shrubby, small-flowered species appears to have had its origins from the same ancestors of the second line that radiated in Peru and northern Chile. Nolana galapagensis is endemic to the Islas Galapagos, with origins traced to Peruvian taxa with a divergence time of 0.35 mya. Rates of diversification over the past 4.02 mya in Nolana, in one of the driest habitats on Earth, suggest rapid adaptive radiation in several clades. Success in Nolana may be attributed to characters that confer a competitive advantage in unpredictable and water-dependent environments, such as succulent leaf anatomy and ecophysiology, and the reproductive mericarp unique to Nolana. The processes affecting or shaping the biota of western South America are discussed.

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