Authors
Brian Tilston Smith, John E McCormack, Andrés M Cuervo, Michael J Hickerson, Alexandre Aleixo, Carlos Daniel Cadena, Jorge Pérez-Emán, Curtis W Burney, Xiaoou Xie, Michael G Harvey, Brant C Faircloth, Travis C Glenn, Elizabeth P Derryberry, Jesse Prejean, Samantha Fields, Robb T Brumfield
Publication date
2014/11
Journal
Nature
Volume
515
Issue
7527
Pages
406-409
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
Since the recognition that allopatric speciation can be induced by large-scale reconfigurations of the landscape that isolate formerly continuous populations, such as the separation of continents by plate tectonics, the uplift of mountains or the formation of large rivers, landscape change has been viewed as a primary driver of biological diversification. This process is referred to in biogeography as vicariance. In the most species-rich region of the world, the Neotropics, the sundering of populations associated with the Andean uplift is ascribed this principal role in speciation,,,. An alternative model posits that rather than being directly linked to landscape change, allopatric speciation is initiated to a greater extent by dispersal events, with the principal drivers of speciation being organism-specific abilities to persist and disperse in the landscape,. Landscape change is not a necessity for speciation in this model. Here we …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
BT Smith, JE McCormack, AM Cuervo, MJ Hickerson… - Nature, 2014