4.2 Article

Punctuational ecological changes rather than global factors drive species diversification and the evolution of wing phenotypes in Morpho butterflies

Journal

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 10, Pages 1592-1607

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.13921

Keywords

butterflies; geometric morphometrics; Morpho; phenotypic diversification; species diversification; wing shape; wing size

Funding

  1. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-10-LABX-25-01]

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This study utilized an integrative approach to investigate the drivers of species and phenotypic diversification in the iconic Neotropical butterfly genus Morpho, revealing a diversification pattern driven by punctuational ecological changes rather than a global driver or biogeographic history. The research found that consideration of variable diversification rates across the phylogeny best explained the diversification of Morpho, possibly associated with lineages occupying different microhabitat conditions. The study highlights the importance of assessing both geographical and ecological drivers of evolution in understanding species diversification.
Assessing the relative importance of geographical and ecological drivers of evolution is paramount to understand the diversification of species and traits at the macroevolutionary scale. Here, we use an integrative approach, combining phylogenetics, biogeography, ecology and quantified phenotypes to investigate the drivers of both species and phenotypic diversification of the iconic Neotropical butterfly genus Morpho. We generated a time-calibrated phylogeny for all known species and inferred historical biogeography. We fitted models of time-dependent (accounting for rate heterogeneity across the phylogeny) and paleoenvironment-dependent diversification (accounting for global effect on the phylogeny). We used geometric morphometrics to assess variation of wing size and shape across the tree and investigated their dynamics of evolution. We found that the diversification of Morpho is best explained when considering variable diversification rates across the tree, possibly associated with lineages occupying different microhabitat conditions. First, a shift from understory to canopy was characterized by an increased speciation rate partially coupled with an increasing rate of wing shape evolution. Second, the occupation of dense bamboo thickets accompanying a major host-plant shift from dicotyledons towards monocotyledons was associated with a simultaneous diversification rate shift and an evolutionary 'jump' of wing size. Our study points to a diversification pattern driven by punctuational ecological changes instead of a global driver or biogeographic history.

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