Phylogenetically-conserved candidate genes unify biodiversity-ecosystem
function relationships and eco-evolutionary dynamics across biological
scales
Abstract
The intra- and interspecific facets of biodiversity have traditionally
been quantified and analysed separately, limiting our understanding of
how evolution has shaped biodiversity, how biodiversity (as a whole)
alters ecological dynamics, and hence eco-evolutionary feedbacks at the
community scale. Here, we propose using candidate genes
phylogenetically-conserved across species and sustaining functional
traits as an inclusive biodiversity unit transcending the intra- and
interspecific boundaries. This framework merges knowledge from
functional genomics and functional ecology, and we first provide
conceptual and technical guidelines for identifying
phylogenetically-conserved candidate genes (PCCGs) within communities,
and for measuring inclusive biodiversity from PCCGs. We then explain how
biodiversity measured at PCCGs can be linked to ecosystem functions,
which may unify recent observations that both intra- and interspecific
biodiversity are important for ecosystem functions. We then highlight
the eco-evolutionary processes shaping PCCGs diversity patterns, and
argue that their respective role can be inferred from concepts derived
from population genetics. Finally, we explain how PCCGs may shift the
field of eco-evolutionary dynamics from a focal-species approach to a
more realistic focal-community approach. This framework provides a novel
perspective to investigate the global ecosystem consequences of
diversity loss across biological scales, and how these ecological
changes further alter biodiversity evolution.