Latitudinal gradients in climatic‐niche evolution accelerate trait evolution at high latitudes |
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Authors: | Adam M Lawson Jason T Weir |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, , Toronto, ON, M1C 1A4 Canada;2. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Toronto Scarborough, , Toronto, ON, M1C 1A4 Canada |
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Abstract: | Despite the importance of divergent selection to the speed of evolution, it remains poorly understood if divergent selection is more prevalent in the tropics (where species richness is highest), or at high latitudes (where paleoclimate change has been most intense). We tested whether the rate of climatic‐niche evolution – one proxy for divergent selection – varies with latitude for 111 pairs of bird species. Using Brownian motion and Ornsetin–Ulhenbeck models, we show that evolutionary rates along two important axes of the climatic‐niche – temperature and seasonality – have been faster at higher latitudes. We then tested whether divergence of the climatic‐niche was associated with evolution in traits important in ecological differentiation (body mass) and reproductive isolation (song), and found that climatic divergence is associated with faster rates in both measures. These results highlight the importance of climate‐mediated divergent selection pressures in driving evolutionary divergence and reproductive isolation at high latitudes. |
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Keywords: | birds body mass climatic‐niche ecological speciation evolutionary rates latitudinal gradients song |
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