Lengthy debate has surrounded the theoretical and empirical science of whether climatic niche evolution is related to increased or decreased rates of biological diversification. Because species can persist for thousands to millions of years, these questions cross broad scales of time and space. Thus, short-term experiments may not provide comprehensive understanding of the system, leading to the emergence of contrasting opinions: niche evolution may increase diversity by allowing species to explore and colonize new geographic areas across which they could speciate; or, niche conservatism might augment biodiversity by supporting isolation of populations that may then undergo allopatric speciation. Here, we use a simulation approach to test how biological diversification responds to different rates and modes of niche evolution. We find that niche conservatism promotes biological diversification, whereas labile niches—whether adapting to the conditions available or changing randomly—generally led to slower diversification rates. These novel results provide a framework for understanding how Earth–life interactions produced such a diverse biota. The authors use a simulation framework to assess how the dynamics of species’ diversification changed with ecological niche shifts under historical climate conditions. Modelling scenarios with niche conservatism resulted in higher rates of net diversification, recapitulating empirical biodiversity patterns.
Ecological niche conservatism spurs diversification in response to climate change
Huijie Qiao,A. T. Peterson,C. Myers,Qinmin Yang,E. Saupe
Published 2024 in Nature Ecology & Evolution
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- Publication year
2024
- Venue
Nature Ecology & Evolution
- Publication date
2024-02-19
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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