Communications Biology (Nov 2024)

Aridification and major geotectonic landscape change shaped an extraordinary species radiation across a world’s extreme elevational gradient

  • Adrián Villastrigo,
  • Steven J. B. Cooper,
  • Barbara Langille,
  • Erinn P. Fagan-Jeffries,
  • William F. Humphreys,
  • Lars Hendrich,
  • Michael Balke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-07181-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Understanding the profound influence of climatic and tectonic histories on adaptation and speciation is a crucial focus in biology research. While voyages like Humboldt’s expedition shaped our understanding of adaptation, the origin of current biodiversity remains unclear – whether it arose in situ or through dispersal from analogous habitats. Situated in the geologically complex Australopacific region, our study focuses on Limbodessus diving beetles (Dytiscidae), a diverse genus distributed from underground aquifers in Western Australia to alpine meadows in New Guinea. Using low-coverage whole-genome sequencing, we established a time-calibrated phylogenetic tree, elucidating Limbodessus’ origin in the mid-late Miocene, most likely in the Sahul continent (i.e., Australia and New Guinea) and western Pacific archipelagos. Our results provide evidence for parallel colonization and speciation at extreme altitudinal ends, driven by aridification in Australia, influencing subterranean colonization, and in situ diversification of alpine taxa by passive-uplifting of local biota in New Guinea. Furthermore, our findings highlight instances of subterranean speciation in isolated underground aquifers, marked by recurrent independent colonizations of this habitat.