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The dimensions of species diversity

The dimensions of species diversity

来源:bioRxiv_logobioRxiv
英文摘要

ABSTRACT Diversification processes underpin the patterns of species diversity that fascinate biologists. Two competing hypotheses disagree about the effect of competition on these processes. The bounded hypothesis suggests that species diversity is limited (bounded) by competition between species for finite niche space, while the unbounded hypothesis proposes that evolution and ecological opportunity associated with speciation, render competition unimportant. We use phylogenetically structured niche modelling, to show that processes consistent with both these diversification models have driven species accumulation in conifers. In agreement with the bounded hypothesis, niche competition constrained diversification, and in line with the unbounded hypothesis, niche evolution and partitioning promoted diversification. We then analyse niche traits to show that these diversification enhancing and inhibiting processes can occur simultaneously on different niche dimensions. Together these results suggests a new hypothesis for lineage diversification based on the multi-dimensional nature of ecological niches that accommodates both bounded and unbounded diversification processes.

Larcombe Matthew J.、Jordan Gregory J.、Higgins Steven I.、Bryant David

Department of Botany, University of OtagoSchool of Biological Sciences, University of TasmaniaDepartment of Botany, University of Otago||Plant Ecology, University of BayreuthDepartment of Maths and Statistics, University of Otago

10.1101/400481

生物科学理论、生物科学方法普通生物学植物学

Larcombe Matthew J.,Jordan Gregory J.,Higgins Steven I.,Bryant David.The dimensions of species diversity[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-04-28].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/400481.点此复制

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