Orchid historical biogeography, diversification, Antarctica and the paradox of orchid dispersal

AimOrchidaceae is the most species-rich angiosperm family and has one of the broadest distributions. Until now, the lack of a well-resolved phylogeny has prevented analyses of orchid historical biogeography. In this study, we use such a phylogeny to estimate the geographical spread of orchids, evalu...

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Published in:Journal of Biogeography
Main Authors: Givnish, Thomas J., Spalink, Daniel, Ames, Mercedes, Lyon, Stephanie P., Hunter, Steven J., Zuluaga, Alejandro, Doucette, Alfonso, Caro, Giovanny Giraldo, McDaniel, James, Clements, Mark A., Arroyo, Mary T. K., Endara, Lorena, Kriebel, Ricardo, Williams, Norris H., Cameron, Kenneth M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
SSE
Bi
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12854
https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/143005
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spelling ftunivchile:oai:repositorio.uchile.cl:2250/143005 2023-05-15T13:41:41+02:00 Orchid historical biogeography, diversification, Antarctica and the paradox of orchid dispersal Givnish, Thomas J. Spalink, Daniel Ames, Mercedes Lyon, Stephanie P. Hunter, Steven J. Zuluaga, Alejandro Doucette, Alfonso Caro, Giovanny Giraldo McDaniel, James Clements, Mark A. Arroyo, Mary T. K. Endara, Lorena Kriebel, Ricardo Williams, Norris H. Cameron, Kenneth M. 2016 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12854 https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/143005 en eng Journal of Biogeography. Volumen: 43 Número: 10 Páginas: 1905-1916 doi:10.1111/jbi.12854 https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/143005 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Chile http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/cl/ CC-BY-NC-ND Journal of Biogeography Southeast Asia Neotropics long-distance dispersal SSE Bi BEARS BioGeo Asparagales Artículo de revista 2016 ftunivchile https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12854 2023-01-29T00:51:32Z AimOrchidaceae is the most species-rich angiosperm family and has one of the broadest distributions. Until now, the lack of a well-resolved phylogeny has prevented analyses of orchid historical biogeography. In this study, we use such a phylogeny to estimate the geographical spread of orchids, evaluate the importance of different regions in their diversification and assess the role of long-distance dispersal (LDD) in generating orchid diversity. LocationGlobal. MethodsAnalyses use a phylogeny including species representing all five orchid subfamilies and almost all tribes and subtribes, calibrated against 17 angiosperm fossils. We estimated historical biogeography and assessed the importance of different regions for rates of speciation, extinction and net species diversification. We evaluated the impact of particular LDD events on orchid diversity by asking how many species evolved in the new range subsequent to those events. ResultsOrchids appear to have arisen in Australia 112Ma (95% higher probability distribution: 102.0-120.0Ma), then spread to the Neotropics via Antarctica by 90Ma (HPD: 79.7-99.5Ma), when all three continents were in close contact and apostasioids split from the ancestor of all other orchids. Ancestors of vanilloids, cypripedioids and orchidoids+epidendroids appear to have originated in the Neotropics 84-64Ma. Repeated long- and short-distance dispersal occurred through orchid history: stochastic mapping identified a mean total of 74 LDD events or 0.8Ma(-1). Across orchid history, Southeast Asia was the most important source and maximally accelerated net diversification; across epidendroids, the Neotropics maximally accelerated diversification. Main conclusionsOur analysis provides the first biogeographical history of the orchids, implicating Australia, the Neotropics and Antarctica in their origin. LDD and life in the Neotropics - especially the Andes - had profound effects on their spread and diversification; >97% of all orchid species are restricted to individual continents. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica Universidad de Chile: Repositorio académico Journal of Biogeography 43 10 1905 1916
institution Open Polar
collection Universidad de Chile: Repositorio académico
op_collection_id ftunivchile
language English
topic Southeast Asia
Neotropics
long-distance dispersal
SSE
Bi
BEARS
BioGeo
Asparagales
spellingShingle Southeast Asia
Neotropics
long-distance dispersal
SSE
Bi
BEARS
BioGeo
Asparagales
Givnish, Thomas J.
Spalink, Daniel
Ames, Mercedes
Lyon, Stephanie P.
Hunter, Steven J.
Zuluaga, Alejandro
Doucette, Alfonso
Caro, Giovanny Giraldo
McDaniel, James
Clements, Mark A.
Arroyo, Mary T. K.
Endara, Lorena
Kriebel, Ricardo
Williams, Norris H.
Cameron, Kenneth M.
Orchid historical biogeography, diversification, Antarctica and the paradox of orchid dispersal
topic_facet Southeast Asia
Neotropics
long-distance dispersal
SSE
Bi
BEARS
BioGeo
Asparagales
description AimOrchidaceae is the most species-rich angiosperm family and has one of the broadest distributions. Until now, the lack of a well-resolved phylogeny has prevented analyses of orchid historical biogeography. In this study, we use such a phylogeny to estimate the geographical spread of orchids, evaluate the importance of different regions in their diversification and assess the role of long-distance dispersal (LDD) in generating orchid diversity. LocationGlobal. MethodsAnalyses use a phylogeny including species representing all five orchid subfamilies and almost all tribes and subtribes, calibrated against 17 angiosperm fossils. We estimated historical biogeography and assessed the importance of different regions for rates of speciation, extinction and net species diversification. We evaluated the impact of particular LDD events on orchid diversity by asking how many species evolved in the new range subsequent to those events. ResultsOrchids appear to have arisen in Australia 112Ma (95% higher probability distribution: 102.0-120.0Ma), then spread to the Neotropics via Antarctica by 90Ma (HPD: 79.7-99.5Ma), when all three continents were in close contact and apostasioids split from the ancestor of all other orchids. Ancestors of vanilloids, cypripedioids and orchidoids+epidendroids appear to have originated in the Neotropics 84-64Ma. Repeated long- and short-distance dispersal occurred through orchid history: stochastic mapping identified a mean total of 74 LDD events or 0.8Ma(-1). Across orchid history, Southeast Asia was the most important source and maximally accelerated net diversification; across epidendroids, the Neotropics maximally accelerated diversification. Main conclusionsOur analysis provides the first biogeographical history of the orchids, implicating Australia, the Neotropics and Antarctica in their origin. LDD and life in the Neotropics - especially the Andes - had profound effects on their spread and diversification; >97% of all orchid species are restricted to individual continents.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Givnish, Thomas J.
Spalink, Daniel
Ames, Mercedes
Lyon, Stephanie P.
Hunter, Steven J.
Zuluaga, Alejandro
Doucette, Alfonso
Caro, Giovanny Giraldo
McDaniel, James
Clements, Mark A.
Arroyo, Mary T. K.
Endara, Lorena
Kriebel, Ricardo
Williams, Norris H.
Cameron, Kenneth M.
author_facet Givnish, Thomas J.
Spalink, Daniel
Ames, Mercedes
Lyon, Stephanie P.
Hunter, Steven J.
Zuluaga, Alejandro
Doucette, Alfonso
Caro, Giovanny Giraldo
McDaniel, James
Clements, Mark A.
Arroyo, Mary T. K.
Endara, Lorena
Kriebel, Ricardo
Williams, Norris H.
Cameron, Kenneth M.
author_sort Givnish, Thomas J.
title Orchid historical biogeography, diversification, Antarctica and the paradox of orchid dispersal
title_short Orchid historical biogeography, diversification, Antarctica and the paradox of orchid dispersal
title_full Orchid historical biogeography, diversification, Antarctica and the paradox of orchid dispersal
title_fullStr Orchid historical biogeography, diversification, Antarctica and the paradox of orchid dispersal
title_full_unstemmed Orchid historical biogeography, diversification, Antarctica and the paradox of orchid dispersal
title_sort orchid historical biogeography, diversification, antarctica and the paradox of orchid dispersal
publishDate 2016
url https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12854
https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/143005
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_source Journal of Biogeography
op_relation Journal of Biogeography. Volumen: 43 Número: 10 Páginas: 1905-1916
doi:10.1111/jbi.12854
https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/143005
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Chile
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/cl/
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12854
container_title Journal of Biogeography
container_volume 43
container_issue 10
container_start_page 1905
op_container_end_page 1916
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