4.5 Article

Rugged relief and climate promote isolation and divergence between two neotropical cold-associated birds

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 75, Issue 10, Pages 2371-2387

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/evo.14318

Keywords

Pleistocene; range shifts; sky islands; speciation; tropical mountains

Funding

  1. UNIFESP Ethics Committee [CEP 0069/12)]
  2. FAPESP
  3. BIOTA program [2011/50143-7, 2011/23155-4, 2015/18287-0, 2014/001132, 2015/12551-7, 2016/11439-1, 2017/25720-7, 2018/17869-3]
  4. NASA grant [FAPESP 2013/50297-0/NSF DOB 1343578, FAPESP 18/034285/DEB 1831560]
  5. CNPq [312697/2018-0, 306204/2019-3]
  6. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior -Brasil (CAPES) [001]
  7. MCTIC/CNPq [465610/2014-5]
  8. FAPEG [201810267000023]
  9. NSF, FAPESP

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Historical factors play a crucial role in establishing patterns of diversity in tropical mountains, with rugged relief and climate fluctuations likely explaining most of the dynamics of diversification in plants and animals. The interplay between landscape and climate is highlighted as an important mechanism in the evolution of Neotropical montane biota.
The role of historical factors in establishing patterns of diversity in tropical mountains is of interest to understand the buildup of megadiverse biotas. In these regions, the historical processes of range fragmentation and contraction followed by dispersal are thought to be mediated by the interplay between rugged relief (complex topography) and climate fluctuations and likely explain most of the dynamics of diversification in plants and animals. Although empirical studies addressing the interaction between climate and topography have provided invaluable insights into population divergence and speciation patterns in tropical montane organisms, a more detailed and robust test of such processes in an explicit spatio-temporal framework is still lacking. Consequently, our ability to gain insights into historical range shifts over time and the genomic footprint left by them is limited. Here, we used niche modeling and subgenomic population-level datasets to explore the evolution of two species of warbling finches (genus Microspingus) disjunctly distributed across the Montane Atlantic Forest, a Neotropical region with complex geological and environmental histories. Population structure inferences suggest a scenario of three genetically differentiated populations, which are congruent with both geography and phenotypic variation. Demographic simulations support asynchronous isolation of these populations as recently as similar to 40,000 years ago, relatively stable population sizes over recent time, and past gene flow subsequent to divergence. Throughout the last 800,000 years, niche models predicted extensive expansion into lowland areas with increasing overlap of species distributions during glacial periods, with prominent retractions and isolation into higher altitudes during interglacials, which are in line with signs of introgression of currently isolated populations. These results support a dual role of cyclical climatic changes: population divergence and persistence in mountain tops during warm periods followed by periods of expansion and admixture in lower elevations during cold periods. Our results underscore the role of the interplay between landscape and climate as an important mechanism in the evolution of the Neotropical montane biota.

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