Phylogenetically older oribatid mites of mountain ranges have broader
geographic ranges and are more generalistic
- Xue Pan,
- Bastian Heimburger,
- Ting-Wen Chen,
- Jing-Zhong Lu,
- Peter Cordes,
- Zhijing Xie,
- Xin Sun,
- Dong Liu,
- Donghui Wu,
- Stefan Scheu,
- Ina Schaefer ,
- Mark Maraun
Bastian Heimburger
University of Göttingen Johann-Friedrich-Blumenbach-Institute for Zoology & Anthropology
Author ProfilePeter Cordes
University of Göttingen Johann-Friedrich-Blumenbach-Institute for Zoology & Anthropology
Author ProfileDong Liu
Northeast Institute of Geography and Agroecology Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileDonghui Wu
Jilin Provincial Key Laboratory of Animal Resource Conservation and Utilization, College of Environment, Northeast Normal University
Author ProfileIna Schaefer
University of Göttingen Johann-Friedrich-Blumenbach-Institute for Zoology & Anthropology
Author ProfileAbstract
Understanding ecological and evolutionary mechanisms that drive
biodiversity patterns is important for comprehending biodiversity.
Despite being critically important to the functioning of ecosystems, the
mechanisms driving belowground biodiversity are little understood. We
here investigated the radiation and trait diversity of soil oribatid
mites from two mountain ranges, i.e. the Alps in Austria and Changbai
Mountain in China, at similar latitude in the temperate zone differing
in orogenesis and exposed to different climates. We collected and
sequenced soil oribatid mites from forests at 950 to 1700 m at each
mountain and embedded them into the chronogram of species from temperate
Eurasia. We investigated the phylogenetic age of oribatid mites and
compared the node age of species with the mountain uplift time of the
Alps and Changbai Mountain. We then inspected trophic variation,
geographical range size and reproductive mode, and identified traits
that promote oribatid mite survival and evolution in montane forest
ecosystems. We found that oribatid mites on Changbai Mountain are
phylogenetically older than species in the Alps. All species on Changbai
Mountain evolved long before the mountain uplift, but some species in
the Alps evolved after the orogenesis. On Changbai Mountain more species
possess broader trophic variation, have larger geographical range sizes
and more often reproduce via parthenogenesis compared to species from
the Alps. Species on Changbai Mountain survived the mountain uplift or
colonized the mountain thereafter supporting the view that generalistic
traits promote survival and evolution in phylogenetically old soil
animal species. Collectively, our findings highlight that combining
species traits and phylogeny allow deeper insight into the evolutionary
forces shaping soil biodiversity in montane ecosystems.08 Nov 2024Submitted to Ecology and Evolution 11 Nov 2024Submission Checks Completed
11 Nov 2024Assigned to Editor
14 Nov 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned