Sixty-Five Million Years of Change in Temperature and Topography Explain Evolutionary History in Eastern North American Plethodontid Salamanders
Authored by Richard Barnes, Adam Thomas Clark
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1086/691796
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/r-barnes/BarnesClark2017-Salamanders
Abstract
For many taxa and systems, species richness peaks at midelevations. One
potential explanation for this pattern is that large-scale changes in
climate and geography have, over evolutionary time, selected for traits
that are favored under conditions found in contemporary midelevation
regions. To test this hypothesis, we use records of historical
temperature and topographic changes over the past 65 Myr to construct a
general simulation model of plethodontid salamander evolution in eastern
North America. We then explore possible mechanisms constraining species
to midelevation bands by using the model to predict plethodontid
evolutionary history and contemporary geographic distributions. Our
results show that models that incorporate both temperature and
topographic changes are better able to predict these patterns,
suggesting that both processes may have played an important role in
driving plethodontid evolution in the region. Additionally, our model
(whose annotated source code is included as a supplement) represents a
proof of concept to encourage future work that takes advantage of recent
advances in computing power to combine models of ecology, evolution, and
earth history to better explain the abundance and distribution of
species over time.
Tags
models
Dynamics
Diversification
speciation
Agent-based model (ABM)
oscillations
Rates
Phylogeography
Global patterns
Species richness
Molecular phylogenies
Paleoclimatology
Climate history
General
simulation model (gsm)
Eco-evo
Phylogenetic reconstruction