Agritrop
Accueil

Slowing taxon cycle can explain biodiversity patterns on islands: Insights into the biogeography of the tropical South Pacific from molecular data

Keppel Gunnar, Nge Francis J., Ibanez Thomas. 2024. Slowing taxon cycle can explain biodiversity patterns on islands: Insights into the biogeography of the tropical South Pacific from molecular data. Journal of Systematics and Evolution, 62 (2), n.spéc. Past, Present, and Future of Mountain and Island Systems : 201-214.

Article de revue ; Article de recherche ; Article de revue à facteur d'impact
[img]
Prévisualisation
Version publiée - Anglais
Sous licence Licence Creative Commons.
614228.pdf

Télécharger (1MB) | Prévisualisation

Résumé : Islands in the tropical Pacific Ocean are renowned for high biodiversity and endemism despite having relatively small landmasses. However, our knowledge of how this biodiversity is formed remains limited. The taxon cycle, where well-dispersed, earlier colonizers become displaced from coastal to inland habitats by new waves of colonizers, producing isolated, range-restricted species, has been proposed to explain current biodiversity patterns. Here, we integrate the outcomes of phylogenetic studies in the region to investigate the sources, age, number of colonizations, and diversification of 16 archipelagos in the tropical and subtropical South Pacific. We then evaluate whether the results support the taxon cycle as a plausible mechanism for these observations. We find that most species in the Pacific arrived less than 5 Mya from geographically close sources, suggesting that colonization by new taxa is a frequent and ongoing process. Therefore, our findings are broadly consistent with the theory of the Taxon Cycle, which posits that ongoing colonization results in the gradual displacement of established lineages. Only the oldest archipelagos, New Caledonia and Fiji, do not conform to this trend, having proportionally less recent colonization events, suggesting that the taxon cycle may slow on older islands. This conclusion is further validated by New Caledonia having lower diversification rate estimates than younger islands. We found that diversification rates across archipelagos are negatively correlated with area and age. Therefore, a taxon cycle that slows with island age appears to be a suitable concept for understanding the dynamic nature and biodiversity patterns of the Pacific Islands.

Mots-clés Agrovoc : biogéographie, biodiversité, diversification, phylogénie

Mots-clés géographiques Agrovoc : Pacifique Sud, Nouvelle-Calédonie, France

Mots-clés libres : Colonization, Diversification, Island biogeography, Pacific, Phylogeography, Taxon cycle

Agences de financement hors UE : Montpellier Advanced Knowledge Institute on Transitions, University of South Australia

Auteurs et affiliations

  • Keppel Gunnar, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR AMAP (FRA) - auteur correspondant
  • Nge Francis J., IRD (FRA)
  • Ibanez Thomas, IRD (FRA)

Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/614228/)

Voir la notice (accès réservé à Agritrop) Voir la notice (accès réservé à Agritrop)

[ Page générée et mise en cache le 2025-09-09 ]