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(Referência obtida automaticamente do Web of Science, por meio da informação sobre o financiamento pela FAPESP e o número do processo correspondente, incluída na publicação pelos autores.)

The Amazon river is a suture zone for a polyphyletic group of co-mimetic heliconiine butterflies

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Autor(es):
Rosser, Neil [1, 2] ; Shirai, Leila T. [3, 4] ; Dasmahapatra, Kanchon K. [2] ; Mallet, James [1] ; Freitas, Andre V. L. [3, 4]
Número total de Autores: 5
Afiliação do(s) autor(es):
[1] Harvard Univ, Dept Organism & Evolutionary Biol, Cambridge, MA 02138 - USA
[2] Univ York, Dept Biol, Wentworth Way, Heslington - England
[3] Univ Estadual Campinas, Inst Biol, Dept Biol Anim, Campinas, SP - Brazil
[4] Univ Estadual Campinas, Inst Biol, Museu Zool, Campinas, SP - Brazil
Número total de Afiliações: 4
Tipo de documento: Artigo Científico
Fonte: ECOGRAPHY; v. 44, n. 2 NOV 2020.
Citações Web of Science: 1
Resumo

The Amazon basin contains few obvious geographic barriers, yet it is the most biodiverse region on Earth. One hypothesis to explain its diversity is that the very large rivers promote allopatric divergence. Consistent with this, maps of heliconiine butterflies made from museum specimens show high subspecies richness close to the Amazon river, suggesting that it may produce or maintain intra-specific phenotypic variability. However, museum data are subject to strong spatial biases (the `Wallacean shortfall' of distribution data), raising the possibility that this pattern is a sampling artefact. To test this, we systematically collected along a similar to 900 km north-south transect running through central Amazonia. We found a significant association between phenotypic diversity and major rivers, with distance from the Amazon river explaining 61% of the variance in the mean polymorphism of 25 species. This association is partly because many species exhibit different phenotypes on either side of the river. Nonetheless, we also find sites with high polymorphism close to the river, indicating continual cross-river dispersal. Our results strongly suggest the presence of a suture zone (a region where multiple species have hybrid zones) near the city of Manaus. However, the effect of the river on spatial patterns of intra-specific phenotypic diversity depends on a species' mimetic phenotype. Rather than being absolute barriers, our results support the idea that rivers can act as partial barriers that trap moving hybrid zones, resulting in a suture zone. As such, the wide Amazonian rivers help generate and maintain colour pattern diversity, but to date there is no evidence that they lead to speciation in our study group. (AU)

Processo FAPESP: 11/50225-3 - História natural, filogenia e conservação de lepidópteros neotropicais
Beneficiário:André Victor Lucci Freitas
Modalidade de apoio: Auxílio à Pesquisa - Programa BIOTA - Regular
Processo FAPESP: 12/50260-6 - Estruturação e evolução da biota amazônica e seu ambiente: uma abordagem integrativa
Beneficiário:Lúcia Garcez Lohmann
Modalidade de apoio: Auxílio à Pesquisa - Programa BIOTA - Temático
Processo FAPESP: 14/23504-7 - A contribuição do desenvolvimento hierárquico para diversificação morfológica
Beneficiário:Leila Teruko Shirai
Modalidade de apoio: Bolsas no Brasil - Pós-Doutorado