Discovery of cryptic plant diversity on the rooftops of the Alps

Archive ouverte

Boucher, Florian, C | Dentant, Cédric | Ibanez, Sébastien | Capblancq, Thibaut | Boleda, Martí | Boulangeat, Louise | Smyčka, Jan | Roquet, Cristina | Lavergne, Sébastien

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. High elevation temperate mountains have long been considered species poor owing to high extinction or low speciation rates during the Pleistocene. We performed a phylogenetic and population genomic investigation of an emblematic high-elevation plant clade (Androsace sect. Aretia, 31 currently recognized species), based on plant surveys conducted during alpinism expeditions. We inferred that this clade originated in the Miocene and continued diversifying through Pleistocene glaciations, and discovered three novel species of Androsace dwelling on different bedrock types on the rooftops of the Alps. This highlights that temperate high mountains have been cradles of plant diversity even during the Pleistocene, with in-situ speciation driven by the combined action of geography and geology. Our findings have an unexpected historical relevance: H.-B. de Saussure likely observed one of these species during his 1788 expedition to the Mont Blanc and we describe it here, over two hundred years after its first sighting.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Neutral biogeography and the evolution of climatic niches.

Archive ouverte | Boucher, Florian C | CCSD

International audience. Recent debate on whether climatic niches are conserved through time has focused on how phylogenetic niche conservatism can be measured by deviations from a Brownian motion model of evolutiona...

High resolution ancient sedimentary DNA shows that alpine plant diversity is associated with human land use and climate change

Archive ouverte | Garcés-Pastor, Sandra | CCSD

International audience. Abstract The European Alps are highly rich in species, but their future may be threatened by ongoing changes in human land use and climate. Here, we reconstructed vegetation, temperature, hum...

Evolutionary origins and species delineation of the two Pyrenean endemics Campanula jaubertiana and C. andorrana (Campanulaceae): evidence for transverse alpine speciation

Archive ouverte | Roquet, Cristina | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...