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Research data . Dataset . 2018

Patterns and drivers of species diversity in the Indo-Pacific red seaweed Portieria

Leliaert, Frederik;
Open Access
Published: 11 Jun 2018
Publisher: Mendeley
Abstract

Alignments, trees and Biogeobears analyses related to the study "Patterns and drivers of species diversity in the Indo-Pacific red seaweed Portieria". Biogeographical processes underlying Indo-Pacific biodiversity patterns have been relatively well studied in marine shallow water invertebrates and fishes, but have been explored much less extensively in seaweeds, despite these organisms often displaying markedly different patterns. Using the marine red alga Portieria as a model, we aim to gain understanding of the evolutionary processes generating seaweed biogeographical patterns. Our results will be evaluated and compared with known patterns and processes in animals. Species diversity estimates were inferred using DNA-based species delimitation methods. Historical biogeographical patterns were inferred based on a six-gene time-calibrated phylogeny, distribution data of 802 specimens, and probabilistic modelling of geographic range evolution. The importance of geographic isolation for speciation was further evaluated by population genetic analyses at the intraspecific level. We delimited 92 candidate species, most with restricted distributions, suggesting low dispersal capacity. Highest species diversity was found in the Indo-Malay Archipelago (IMA). Our phylogeny indicates that Portieria originated during the late Cretaceous in the area that is now the Central Indo-Pacific. The biogeographical history of Portieria includes repeated dispersal events to peripheral regions, followed by long-term persistence and diversification of lineages within those regions, and limited dispersal back to the IMA. Our results suggest that the long geological history of the IMA played an important role in shaping Portieria diversity. High species richness in the IMA resulted from a combination of speciation at small spatial scales, possibly as a result of increased regional habitat diversity from the Eocene onwards, and species accumulation via dispersal and/or island integration through tectonic movement. Our results are consistent with the biodiversity feedback model, in which biodiversity hotspots act as both ‘centres of origin’ and ‘centres of accumulation’, and corroborate previous findings for invertebrates and fish that there is no single unifying model explaining the biological diversity within the IMA.

Subjects

Phylogenetics, Pacific Ocean, Marine Biodiversity, Biogeography, Other, Interdisciplinary sciences, Indian Ocean, Red Algae

Funded by
NSERC
Project
  • Funder: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
,
ARC| Evolutionary dynamics of the algae: understanding adaptive potential under environmental change
Project
  • Funder: Australian Research Council (ARC) (ARC)
  • Project Code: FT110100585
  • Funding stream: ARC Future Fellowships ; Future Fellowships
,
ARC| Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP150100705
Project
  • Funder: Australian Research Council (ARC) (ARC)
  • Project Code: DP150100705
  • Funding stream: Discovery Projects
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