Authors
Michael D Crisp, Mary TK Arroyo, Lyn G Cook, Maria A Gandolfo, Gregory J Jordan, Matt S McGlone, Peter H Weston, Mark Westoby, Peter Wilf, H Peter Linder
Publication date
2009/2/15
Journal
Nature
Volume
458
Issue
7239
Pages
754-756
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
How and why organisms are distributed as they are has long intrigued evolutionary biologists,,,. The tendency for species to retain their ancestral ecology has been demonstrated in distributions on local and regional scales,,, but the extent of ecological conservatism over tens of millions of years and across continents has not been assessed,,,,,. Here we show that biome stasis at speciation has outweighed biome shifts by a ratio of more than 25:1, by inferring ancestral biomes for an ecologically diverse sample of more than 11,000 plant species from around the Southern Hemisphere. Stasis was also prevalent in transocean colonizations. Availability of a suitable biome could have substantially influenced which lineages establish on more than one landmass, in addition to the influence of the rarity of the dispersal events themselves. Conversely, the taxonomic composition of biomes has probably been strongly …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MD Crisp, MTK Arroyo, LG Cook, MA Gandolfo… - Nature, 2009