Caught in the Act: Incipient Speciation at the Southern Limit of <i>Viburnum</i> in the Central Andes

dc.contributor.authorCarlos A. Maya‐Lastra
dc.contributor.authorPatrick W. Sweeney
dc.contributor.authorDeren A. R. Eaton
dc.contributor.authorVania Torrez
dc.contributor.authorCarla Maldonado
dc.contributor.authorMalu I. Ore-Rengifo
dc.contributor.authorMónica Arakaki
dc.contributor.authorMichael J. Donoghue
dc.contributor.authorErika J. Edwards
dc.coverage.spatialBolivia
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-22T14:24:33Z
dc.date.available2026-03-22T14:24:33Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.descriptionCitaciones: 5
dc.description.abstractA fundamental objective of evolutionary biology is to understand the origin of independently evolving species. Phylogenetic studies of species radiations rarely are able to document ongoing speciation; instead, modes of speciation, entailing geographic separation and/or ecological differentiation, are posited retrospectively. The Oreinotinus clade of Viburnum has radiated recently from north to south through the cloud forests of Mexico and Central America to the Central Andes. Our analyses support a hypothesis of incipient speciation in Oreinotinus at the southern edge of its geographic range, from central Peru to northern Argentina. Although several species and infraspecific taxa have been recognized in this area, multiple lines of evidence and analytical approaches (including analyses of phylogenetic relationships, genetic structure, leaf morphology, and climatic envelopes) favor the recognition of just a single species, V. seemenii. We show that what has previously been recognized as V. seemenii f. minor has recently occupied the drier Tucuman-Bolivian forest region from Samaipata in Bolivia to Salta in northern Argentina. Plants in these populations form a well-supported clade with a distinctive genetic signature and they have evolved smaller, narrower leaves. We interpret this as the beginning of a within-species divergence process that has elsewhere in the neotropics resulted repeatedly in Viburnum species with a particular set of leaf ecomorphs. Specifically, the southern populations are in the process of evolving the small, glabrous, and entire leaf ecomorph that has evolved in four other montane areas of endemism. As predicted based on our studies of leaf ecomorphs in Chiapas, Mexico, these southern populations experience generally drier conditions, with large diurnal temperature fluctuations. In a central portion of the range of V. seemenii, characterized by wetter climatic conditions, we also document what may be the initial differentiation of the leaf ecomorph with larger, pubescent, and toothy leaves. The emergence of these ecomorphs thus appears to be driven by adaptation to subtly different climatic conditions in separate geographic regions, as opposed to parapatric differentiation along elevational gradients as suggested by Viburnum species distributions in other parts of the neotropics.
dc.identifier.doi10.1093/sysbio/syae023
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syae023
dc.identifier.urihttps://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/46341
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherOxford University Press
dc.relation.ispartofSystematic Biology
dc.sourceAngelo State University
dc.subjectBiology
dc.subjectGenetic algorithm
dc.subjectTaxon
dc.subjectRange (aeronautics)
dc.subjectClade
dc.subjectViburnum
dc.subjectPhylogenetic tree
dc.subjectSpecies complex
dc.subjectEndemism
dc.subjectEcology
dc.titleCaught in the Act: Incipient Speciation at the Southern Limit of <i>Viburnum</i> in the Central Andes
dc.typearticle

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