Evolutionary drivers of the hump-shaped latitudinal gradient of benthic polychaete species richness along the Southeastern Pacific coast

PeerJ. 2021 Sep 27:9:e12010. doi: 10.7717/peerj.12010. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Latitudinal diversity gradients (LDG) and their explanatory factors are among the most challenging topics in macroecology and biogeography. Despite of its apparent generality, a growing body of evidence shows that 'anomalous' LDG (i.e., inverse or hump-shaped trends) are common among marine organisms along the Southeastern Pacific (SEP) coast. Here, we evaluate the shape of the LDG of marine benthic polychaetes and its underlying causes using a dataset of 643 species inhabiting the continental shelf (<200 m depth), using latitudinal bands with a spatial resolution of 0.5°, along the SEP (3-56° S). The explanatory value of six oceanographic (Sea Surface Temperature (SST), SST range, salinity, salinity range, primary productivity and shelf area), and one macroecological proxy (median latitudinal range of species) were assessed using a random forest model. The taxonomic structure was used to estimate the degree of niche conservatism of predictor variables and to estimate latitudinal trends in phylogenetic diversity, based on three indices (phylogenetic richness (PDSES), mean pairwise distance (MPDSES), and variation of pairwise distances (VPD)). The LDG exhibits a hump-shaped trend, with a maximum peak of species richness at ca. 42° S, declining towards northern and southern areas of SEP. The latitudinal pattern was also evident in local samples controlled by sampling effort. The random forest model had a high accuracy (pseudo-r2 = 0.95) and showed that the LDG could be explained by four variables (median latitudinal range, SST, salinity, and SST range), yet the functional relationship between species richness and these predictors was variable. A significant degree of phylogenetic conservatism was detected for the median latitudinal range and SST. PDSES increased toward the southern region, whereas VPD showed the opposite trend, both statistically significant. MPDSES has the same trend as PDSES, but it is not significant. Our results reinforce the idea that the south Chile fjord area, particularly the Chiloé region, was likely the evolutionary source of new species of marine polychaetes along SEP, creating a hotspot of diversity. Therefore, in the same way as the canonical LDG shows a decline in diversity while moving away from the tropics; on this case the decline occurs while moving away from Chiloé Island. These results, coupled with a strong phylogenetic signal of the main predictor variables suggest that processes operating mainly at evolutionary timescales govern the LDG.

Keywords: Annelida; Biogeography; Macroecology; Macroevolution; Niche conservatism; Random forest.

Grants and funding

Rodrigo A. Moreno received funding for this study from CONICYT D-21070030 and CONICYT AT-24091021 fellowships, Beca de Subsidio a la Investigación for Doctoral Thesis projects from the Instituto de Ecología y Biodiversidad (IEB) and a research grant from the Programa de Estadías Cortas de Investigación of the Vicerrectoría de Asuntos Académicos, Universidad de Chile. Nicolás Rozbaczylo received financial support from CONA-C13F 07-07, CONA-C14F 08-10, CONA-C15F 09-09, CONA-C17F 11-09 and CONA-C18F 12-08 projects through of the Servicio Hidrográfico y Oceanográfico de la Armada de Chile and the Comité Oceanográfico Nacional (CONA). Elie Poulin received financial support from BASAL Grant PFB 023, CONICYT-CHILE and the Iniciativa Científica Milenio Grant ICM P05-002. Fabio A Labra received support from FONDECYT grant N° 1100729. Nelson A Lagos received additional support during the finalization of this study from the Millennium Science Initiative Program (ICN2019_015) SECOS. Fabio A Labra and Nelson A Lagos were supported by PIA ANID ACT 172037. Darko D Cotoras was supported with his personal funds. The research of Marcelo M Rivadeneira was funded by ANID/FONDECYT 1200843 and by the “Concurso de Fortalecimiento al Desarrollo Científico de Centros Regionales 2020-R20F0008-CEAZA". There was no additional external funding received for this study. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.