TY - JOUR
T1 - Biome conservatism prevailed in repeated long-distance colonization of Madagascar's mountains by Helichrysum (Compositae, Gnaphalieae)
AU - Blanco-Gavaldà, Carme
AU - Puig-Surroca, Genís
AU - Andrés-Sánchez, Santiago
AU - Razafimandimbison, Sylvain G.
AU - Letsara, Rokiman
AU - Bergh, Nicola G.
AU - Cron, Glynis V.
AU - Moreyra, Lucía D.
AU - Calleja, Juan Antonio
AU - Castillo, Oscar
AU - Bayer, Randall J.
AU - Leliaert, Frederik
AU - Susanna, Alfonso
AU - Galbany-Casals, Mercè
N1 - Copyright © 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - Colonization and diversification processes are responsible for the distinctiveness of island biotas, with Madagascar standing out as a biodiversity hotspot exceptionally rich in species and endemism. Regardless of its significance, the evolutionary history and diversification drivers of Madagascar's flora remain understudied. Here we focus on Helichrysum (Compositae, Gnaphalieae) to investigate the evolutionary and biogeographic origins of the Malagasy flora. We inferred a highly resolved phylogeny based on target-enrichment data from 327 species (including 51 % of Malagasy endemics) and conducted ancestral range estimation analyses. Our results revealed at least six trans-oceanic dispersal events from different African regions to Madagascar during the Pliocene. In this process, biome conservatism prevailed, as evidenced by similarities between Malagasy lineages and their African relatives. The southern African grasslands, known to be the center of diversification and the main source of African Helichrysum lineages, played a key role in the colonization of Madagascar as the ancestral source area of at least three clades. The Tropical Afromontane region was revealed as the source of at least two montane Malagasy lineages that substantially radiated in-situ. Finally, a dispersal event from southwestern Africa led to a lineage represented by a single species adapted to the island's southwestern arid conditions. The main radiations of Helichrysum in Madagascar's mountains occurred within the last 2 My, coinciding with a transition towards cooler and drier conditions and the expansion of open habitats, likely driven by a combination of geographic and ecological speciation. Overall, our findings highlight the affinities between the montane floras of continental Africa and Madagascar.
AB - Colonization and diversification processes are responsible for the distinctiveness of island biotas, with Madagascar standing out as a biodiversity hotspot exceptionally rich in species and endemism. Regardless of its significance, the evolutionary history and diversification drivers of Madagascar's flora remain understudied. Here we focus on Helichrysum (Compositae, Gnaphalieae) to investigate the evolutionary and biogeographic origins of the Malagasy flora. We inferred a highly resolved phylogeny based on target-enrichment data from 327 species (including 51 % of Malagasy endemics) and conducted ancestral range estimation analyses. Our results revealed at least six trans-oceanic dispersal events from different African regions to Madagascar during the Pliocene. In this process, biome conservatism prevailed, as evidenced by similarities between Malagasy lineages and their African relatives. The southern African grasslands, known to be the center of diversification and the main source of African Helichrysum lineages, played a key role in the colonization of Madagascar as the ancestral source area of at least three clades. The Tropical Afromontane region was revealed as the source of at least two montane Malagasy lineages that substantially radiated in-situ. Finally, a dispersal event from southwestern Africa led to a lineage represented by a single species adapted to the island's southwestern arid conditions. The main radiations of Helichrysum in Madagascar's mountains occurred within the last 2 My, coinciding with a transition towards cooler and drier conditions and the expansion of open habitats, likely driven by a combination of geographic and ecological speciation. Overall, our findings highlight the affinities between the montane floras of continental Africa and Madagascar.
KW - Afromontane flora
KW - Asteraceae
KW - Biogeography
KW - Dispersal
KW - Helichrysum
KW - Madagascar
KW - Target-enrichment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85214344996&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/3256bb76-cb50-3007-a2b7-d1eb1c36ca5a/
U2 - 10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108283
DO - 10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108283
M3 - Article
C2 - 39761774
SN - 1055-7903
VL - 204
JO - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
JF - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
M1 - 108283
ER -