Evolutionary heritage shapes tree distributions along an Amazon-to-Andes elevation gradient

Abstract

Understanding how evolutionary constraints shape the elevational distributions of tree lineages provides valuable insight into the future of tropical montane forests under global change. With narrow elevational ranges, high taxonomic turnover, frequent habitat specialisation, and exceptional levels of endemism, tropical montane forests and trees are predicted to be highly sensitive to environmental change. Using plot census data from a gradient traversing >3000 m in elevation on the Amazonian flank of the Peruvian Andes, we employ phylogenetic approaches to assess the influence of evolutionary heritage on distribution trends of trees at the genus level. We find that closely related lineages tend to occur at similar mean elevations, with sister genera occurring an mean 254 m of elevation closer to each other than the broader, average trend between pairs of genera. We also demonstrate phylogenetic clustering both above and below the cloud-base ecotone. Belying these general trends, some lineages occur across many different elevations. However, these highly plastic lineages are not phylogenetically clustered. Overall, our findings suggest that tropical montane forests are home to unique tree lineage diversity, constrained by their evolutionary heritage and vulnerable to substantial losses under environmental changes, such as rising temperatures or an upward shift of the cloud base.

Publication
Preprint (Accepted in Biotropica)
Andy R Griffiths
Andy R Griffiths
Plant Ecologist

My research interests include plant ecology and evolution, mountain ecosystems, environmental gradients, and fieldwork approaches.

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