Spatiotemporal Diversification of Global Junipers: Traces of Niche Conservatism and Trait‐Dependent Diversification

ABSTRACT Speciation rates differ globally across phylogenies and regions, and the complexity of the speciation process makes it difficult to fully understand these variations. It has been suggested that in conifers, the speciation process is primarily influenced by abiotic factors, operating in a lo...

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Main Authors: Rodrigo Martínez de León, Alejandra Moreno‐Letelier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-02-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70910
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author Rodrigo Martínez de León
Alejandra Moreno‐Letelier
author_facet Rodrigo Martínez de León
Alejandra Moreno‐Letelier
author_sort Rodrigo Martínez de León
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Speciation rates differ globally across phylogenies and regions, and the complexity of the speciation process makes it difficult to fully understand these variations. It has been suggested that in conifers, the speciation process is primarily influenced by abiotic factors, operating in a local adaptive dynamic. In this study, we investigate changes in the climatic envelopes of conifer species of the genus Juniperus and test their explanatory power in predicting the distribution of speciation rates in space controlling for other explanatory factors such as topography and morphology. Location: Northern Hemisphere. Taxon: Juniperus. We used phylogenetic comparative methods and macroecological methods to evaluate speciation rate shifts, trait‐speciation correlations, trait‐geography correlations, and areas of phylogenetic endemism. Climatic niches in the juniper species follow bimodal trends in temperature and precipitation variables. These trends imply a strong event of divergence or possible adaptation that is trackable to a specific moment and geography. Additionally, we found significant explanatory power for some climatic variables and a heterogeneous response by continent, with morphological changes being the most important in North America, whereas climate is more relevant in the Tibetan Plateau. Centers of diversity follow different trends in phylogenetic diversity and endemism, suggesting different causes of diversity. Overall, junipers exhibit a conserved climatic niche, and their speciation process is marked by the particular history of their distribution rather than by general trends in climatic evolution. Morphological evolution is more important than previously considered and both accumulation of lineages and rapid speciation are supported for hotspot regions.
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spelling doaj-art-a173a99673c7472ba4a76c5f4dff6edf2025-08-20T03:13:50ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582025-02-01152n/an/a10.1002/ece3.70910Spatiotemporal Diversification of Global Junipers: Traces of Niche Conservatism and Trait‐Dependent DiversificationRodrigo Martínez de León0Alejandra Moreno‐Letelier1Posgrado en Ciencias Biológicas Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Ciudad de México MexicoJardín Botánico, Instituto de Biología Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Ciudad de México MexicoABSTRACT Speciation rates differ globally across phylogenies and regions, and the complexity of the speciation process makes it difficult to fully understand these variations. It has been suggested that in conifers, the speciation process is primarily influenced by abiotic factors, operating in a local adaptive dynamic. In this study, we investigate changes in the climatic envelopes of conifer species of the genus Juniperus and test their explanatory power in predicting the distribution of speciation rates in space controlling for other explanatory factors such as topography and morphology. Location: Northern Hemisphere. Taxon: Juniperus. We used phylogenetic comparative methods and macroecological methods to evaluate speciation rate shifts, trait‐speciation correlations, trait‐geography correlations, and areas of phylogenetic endemism. Climatic niches in the juniper species follow bimodal trends in temperature and precipitation variables. These trends imply a strong event of divergence or possible adaptation that is trackable to a specific moment and geography. Additionally, we found significant explanatory power for some climatic variables and a heterogeneous response by continent, with morphological changes being the most important in North America, whereas climate is more relevant in the Tibetan Plateau. Centers of diversity follow different trends in phylogenetic diversity and endemism, suggesting different causes of diversity. Overall, junipers exhibit a conserved climatic niche, and their speciation process is marked by the particular history of their distribution rather than by general trends in climatic evolution. Morphological evolution is more important than previously considered and both accumulation of lineages and rapid speciation are supported for hotspot regions.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70910
spellingShingle Rodrigo Martínez de León
Alejandra Moreno‐Letelier
Spatiotemporal Diversification of Global Junipers: Traces of Niche Conservatism and Trait‐Dependent Diversification
Ecology and Evolution
title Spatiotemporal Diversification of Global Junipers: Traces of Niche Conservatism and Trait‐Dependent Diversification
title_full Spatiotemporal Diversification of Global Junipers: Traces of Niche Conservatism and Trait‐Dependent Diversification
title_fullStr Spatiotemporal Diversification of Global Junipers: Traces of Niche Conservatism and Trait‐Dependent Diversification
title_full_unstemmed Spatiotemporal Diversification of Global Junipers: Traces of Niche Conservatism and Trait‐Dependent Diversification
title_short Spatiotemporal Diversification of Global Junipers: Traces of Niche Conservatism and Trait‐Dependent Diversification
title_sort spatiotemporal diversification of global junipers traces of niche conservatism and trait dependent diversification
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70910
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AT alejandramorenoletelier spatiotemporaldiversificationofglobaljuniperstracesofnicheconservatismandtraitdependentdiversification