4.4 Article

Integrating coalescent-based species delimitation with ecological niche modeling delimited two species within the Stewartia sinensis complex (Theaceae)

Journal

JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATICS AND EVOLUTION
Volume 60, Issue 5, Pages 1037-1048

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jse.12732

Keywords

integrative taxonomy; multispecies coalescent; niche differentiation; species complex; Stewartia sinensis; Stewartia gemmata

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31461123001, 3151101152]

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Accurate species delimitation is crucial for estimating species diversity accurately and is fundamental to most branches of biology. This study applied integrative approaches in phylogeny, ecology, and morphology to examine species boundaries within the Stewartia sinensis complex in China and proposed two distinct species based on niche differentiation and morphometric analyses.
Accurate species delimitation is the key to precise estimation of species diversity and is fundamental to most branches of biology. Unclear species boundaries within species complexes could lead to the underestimation of species diversity. However, species delimitation of species complexes remains challenging due to the continuum of phenotypic variations. To robustly examine species boundaries within a species complex, integrative approaches in phylogeny, ecology, and morphology were applied to the Stewartia sinensis complex (Theaceae) endemic to China. Multispecies coalescent-based species delimitation using 572 nuclear ortholog sequences (anchored enrichment) supported reciprocal phylogenetic monophyly of the northern lineage (NL) and southern lineage (SL), which were not sister clades. Niche equivalency and similarity tests demonstrated significant climatic niche differentiation between NL and SL with observed Warren et al.'s I = 0.0073 and Schoener's D = 0.0021. Species distribution modeling also separated their potential distribution. Morphometric analyses suggested significant interlineage differentiation of multiple traits including the ratio of length and width, leaf width, and pedicel length, although overall similarity did not differ. Based on the integrative species concept, two distinct species were proposed with legitimate names of Stewartia gemmata for SL and S. sinensis for NL. Our empirical study of the S. sinensis complex highlights the importance of applying multiple species criteria, in particular the underappreciated niche differentiation, to species delimitation in species complexes pervasive in plants.

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