Project Goals: To identify regions of
recently evolved endemic (neo-endemism) mammal species in California
and thereby infer areas of rapid evolutionary diversification, which
may help guide conservation prioritization and future planning for
protected areas.
Four species-based GIS rasters were
produced of mammalian endemism (see
reference
for details
). This is: Richness of species
distribution models weighted by inverse range size
Abstract:
The high rate of anthropogenic impact on natural systems mandates
protection of the evolutionary processes that generate and sustain
biological diversity. Environmental drivers of diversification include
spatial heterogeneity of abiotic and biotic agents of divergent
selection, features that suppress gene flow, and climatic or geological
processes that open new niche space. To explore how well such proxies
perform as surrogates for conservation planning, we need first to map
areas with rapid diversification — ‘evolutionary
hotspots’. Here we combine estimates of range size and divergence
time to map spatial patterns of neo-endemism for mammals of California,
a global biodiversity hotspot.
Neo-endemism is explored at two scales: (i) endemic species, weighted
by the inverse of range size and mtDNA sequence divergence from sisters;
and (ii) as a surrogate for spatial patterns of phenotypic divergence,
endemic subspecies, again using inverse-weighting of range size. The
species-level analysis revealed foci of narrowly endemic, young taxa in
the central Sierra Nevada, northern and central coast, and Tehachapi and
Peninsular Ranges. The subspecies endemism-richness analysis supported
the last four areas as hotspots for diversification, but also
highlighted additional coastal areas (Monterey to north of San Francisco
Bay) and the Inyo Valley to the east. We suggest these hotspots reflect
the major processes shaping mammal neo-endemism: steep environmental
gradients, biotic admixture areas, and areas with recent
geological/climate change. Anthropogenic changes to both environment and
land use will have direct impacts on regions of rapid divergence.
However, despite widespread changes to land cover in California, the
majority of the hotspots identified here occur in areas with relatively
intact ecological landscapes. The geographical scope of conserving
evolutionary process is beyond the scale of any single agency or
nongovernmental organization. Choosing which land to closely protect
and/or purchase will always require close coordination between agencies.