4.5 Article

Long-term cloud forest response to climate warming revealed by insect speciation history

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 75, Issue 2, Pages 231-244

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/evo.14111

Keywords

Coleoptera; hybridization; Last Glacial Maximum; Quaternary climate; speciation; trade‐ wind inversion

Funding

  1. Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigacion [CGL2017-85718-P]
  2. FEDER
  3. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades [EQC2018-004418-P]
  4. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades through an FPU PhD fellowship [FPU014/02948]

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Montane cloud forests are highly endemic areas and vulnerable terrestrial ecosystems to climate change. Understanding how they contribute to biodiversity and respond to climate change is important. Genomic data is a rich source of information to further understand the origin of montane cloud forest biodiversity and its potential impacts from ongoing climate change.
Montane cloud forests are areas of high endemism, and are one of the more vulnerable terrestrial ecosystems to climate change. Thus, understanding how they both contribute to the generation of biodiversity, and will respond to ongoing climate change, are important and related challenges. The widely accepted model for montane cloud forest dynamics involves upslope forcing of their range limits with global climate warming. However, limited climate data provides some support for an alternative model, where range limits are forced downslope with climate warming. Testing between these two models is challenging, due to the inherent limitations of climate and pollen records. We overcome this with an alternative source of historical information, testing between competing model predictions using genomic data and demographic analyses for a species of beetle tightly associated to an oceanic island cloud forest. Results unequivocally support the alternative model: populations that were isolated at higher elevation peaks during the Last Glacial Maximum are now in contact and hybridizing at lower elevations. Our results suggest that genomic data are a rich source of information to further understand how montane cloud forest biodiversity originates, and how it is likely to be impacted by ongoing climate change.

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