Diversification in the Tropical Pacific: Comparisons Between Marine and Terrestrial Systems and the Importance of Founder Speciation1

Patterns of distribution and processes of differentiation have often been contrasted between terrestrial and marine biotas. The islands of Oceania offer an excellent setting to explore this contrast, because the geographic setting for terrestrial and shallow-water, benthic, marine organisms are the...

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Published in:Integrative and Comparative Biology
Main Authors: Gustav Paulay, Chris Meyer
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/42.5.922
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spelling ftbioone:10.1093/icb/42.5.922 2024-06-02T08:10:29+00:00 Diversification in the Tropical Pacific: Comparisons Between Marine and Terrestrial Systems and the Importance of Founder Speciation1 Gustav Paulay Chris Meyer Gustav Paulay Chris Meyer world 2002-11-01 text/HTML https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/42.5.922 en eng The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology doi:10.1093/icb/42.5.922 All rights reserved. https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/42.5.922 Text 2002 ftbioone https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/42.5.922 2024-05-07T00:53:24Z Patterns of distribution and processes of differentiation have often been contrasted between terrestrial and marine biotas. The islands of Oceania offer an excellent setting to explore this contrast, because the geographic setting for terrestrial and shallow-water, benthic, marine organisms are the same: the myriad islands strewn across the vast Pacific. The size of species ranges and the geographic distribution of endemism are two biogeographic attributes that are thought to differ markedly between terrestrial and marine biotas in the Pacific. While terrestrial species are frequently confined to single islands or archipelagoes throughout Oceania, marine species tend to have wide to very wide distributions, and are rarely restricted to single island groups except for the most isolated archipelagoes. We explore the conditions under which species can reach an island by dispersal and differentiate. Genetic differentiation can occur either through founder speciation or vicariance; these processes are requisite ends of a continuum. We show that founder speciation is most likely when few propagules enter the dispersal medium and survive well while they travel far. We argue that conditions favorable to founder speciation are common in marine as well as terrestrial systems, and that terrestrial-type, archipelagic-level endemism is likely common in marine taxa. We give examples of marine groups that show archipelagic level endemism on most Pacific island groups as well as of terrestrial species that are widespread. Thus both the patterns and processes of insular diversification are variable, and overlap more between land and sea than previously considered. Text Myriad Islands Single Island BioOne Online Journals Myriad Islands ENVELOPE(-64.393,-64.393,-65.077,-65.077) Pacific Single Island ENVELOPE(68.667,68.667,-69.817,-69.817) Integrative and Comparative Biology 42 5 922 934
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description Patterns of distribution and processes of differentiation have often been contrasted between terrestrial and marine biotas. The islands of Oceania offer an excellent setting to explore this contrast, because the geographic setting for terrestrial and shallow-water, benthic, marine organisms are the same: the myriad islands strewn across the vast Pacific. The size of species ranges and the geographic distribution of endemism are two biogeographic attributes that are thought to differ markedly between terrestrial and marine biotas in the Pacific. While terrestrial species are frequently confined to single islands or archipelagoes throughout Oceania, marine species tend to have wide to very wide distributions, and are rarely restricted to single island groups except for the most isolated archipelagoes. We explore the conditions under which species can reach an island by dispersal and differentiate. Genetic differentiation can occur either through founder speciation or vicariance; these processes are requisite ends of a continuum. We show that founder speciation is most likely when few propagules enter the dispersal medium and survive well while they travel far. We argue that conditions favorable to founder speciation are common in marine as well as terrestrial systems, and that terrestrial-type, archipelagic-level endemism is likely common in marine taxa. We give examples of marine groups that show archipelagic level endemism on most Pacific island groups as well as of terrestrial species that are widespread. Thus both the patterns and processes of insular diversification are variable, and overlap more between land and sea than previously considered.
author2 Gustav Paulay
Chris Meyer
format Text
author Gustav Paulay
Chris Meyer
spellingShingle Gustav Paulay
Chris Meyer
Diversification in the Tropical Pacific: Comparisons Between Marine and Terrestrial Systems and the Importance of Founder Speciation1
author_facet Gustav Paulay
Chris Meyer
author_sort Gustav Paulay
title Diversification in the Tropical Pacific: Comparisons Between Marine and Terrestrial Systems and the Importance of Founder Speciation1
title_short Diversification in the Tropical Pacific: Comparisons Between Marine and Terrestrial Systems and the Importance of Founder Speciation1
title_full Diversification in the Tropical Pacific: Comparisons Between Marine and Terrestrial Systems and the Importance of Founder Speciation1
title_fullStr Diversification in the Tropical Pacific: Comparisons Between Marine and Terrestrial Systems and the Importance of Founder Speciation1
title_full_unstemmed Diversification in the Tropical Pacific: Comparisons Between Marine and Terrestrial Systems and the Importance of Founder Speciation1
title_sort diversification in the tropical pacific: comparisons between marine and terrestrial systems and the importance of founder speciation1
publisher The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology
publishDate 2002
url https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/42.5.922
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op_source https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/42.5.922
op_relation doi:10.1093/icb/42.5.922
op_rights All rights reserved.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/42.5.922
container_title Integrative and Comparative Biology
container_volume 42
container_issue 5
container_start_page 922
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