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首页> 外文期刊>Ecology and Evolution >Evolution of a key trait greatly affects underground community assembly process through habitat adaptation in earthworms
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Evolution of a key trait greatly affects underground community assembly process through habitat adaptation in earthworms

机译:通过的栖息地适应,关键性状的演变极大地影响了地下社区的集会过程

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Underground community assemblies have not been studied well compared with aboveground communities, despite their importance for our understanding of whole ecosystems. To investigate underground community assembly over evolutionary timescales, we examined terrestrial earthworm communities (Oligochaeta: Haplotaxida) in conserved mountainous primary forests in Japan as a model system. We collected 553 earthworms mostly from two dominant families, the Megascolecidae and the Lumbricidae, from 12 sites. We constructed a molecular taxonomic unit tree based on the analysis of three genes to examine the effects of a biogeographic factor (dispersal ability) and an evolutionary factor (habitat adaptation) on the earthworm community assembly process. The phylogenetic distance of the earthworm communities among sites was positively correlated with geographic distance when intraspecific variation was included, indicating that the divergence within species was affected by biogeographic factors. The community assembly process in the Megascolecidae has also been affected by environmental conditions in relation to an evolutionary relationship between habitat environment and intestinal cecum type, a trait closely related to habitat depth and diet, whereas that in the Lumbricidae has not been affected as such. Intestinal cecum type showed a pattern of niche conservatism in the Megascolecidae lineage. Our results suggest that investigating the evolution of a key trait related to life history can lead to the clear description of community assembly process over a long timescale and that the community assembly process can differ greatly among related lineages even though they live sympatrically.
机译:尽管地下社区集会对我们理解整个生态系统很重要,但与地下社区相比,还没有对其进行深入研究。为了研究进化时间尺度上的地下群落聚集,我们以日本保护性山区原始森林中的陆地ter群落(Oligochaeta:Haplotaxida)为模型系统。我们从12个地点收集了553个earth,这些earth主要来自两个主要科,Megascolecidae和Lumbricidae。我们基于对三个基因的分析,构建了一个分子分类学单位树,以研究生物地理因素(分散能力)和进化因素(栖息地适应)对assembly群落组装过程的影响。当包括种内变异时,sites群落之间的系统发育距离与地理距离呈正相关,表明物种内部的差异受生物地理因素的影响。 Megascolecidae的社区集会过程还受到环境条件的影响,与栖息地环境和肠盲肠类型之间的进化关系有关,该特性与栖息地的深度和饮食密切相关,而Lumbricidae则没有受到影响。肠盲肠类型在Megascolecidae谱系中显示出利基保守性模式。我们的结果表明,调查与生活史相关的关键性状的演变可以长期清晰地描述社区集会过程,并且即使相关世系同居,社区集结过程在相关世系之间也会有很大差异。

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