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Anthropogenic threats to evolutionary heritage of angiosperms in the Netherlands through an increase in high-competition environments
Authors:Igor V Bartish  Wim A Ozinga  Mark I Bartish  GW Wieger Wamelink  Stephan M Hennekens  Benjamin Yguel  Andreas Prinzing
Institution:1. Department of Genetic Ecology, Institute of Botany, Academy of Sciences of Czech Republic, Zamek 1, Pr?honice, 25243 Czech Republic;2. Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), P.O. Box 47, Wageningen, NL-6700 AA The Netherlands;3. Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, SE-100 44 Sweden;4. Centre d'Ecologie et des Sciences de la Conservation (CESCO-UMR 7204), Sorbonne Universités-MNHN-CNRS-UPMC, CP51, 55-61 rue Buffon, Paris, 75005 France;5. University Rennes 1, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Research Unit "Ecosystèmes, Biodiversité, Evolution", Evolution (UMR 6553), Campus Beaulieu, Bâtiment 14 A, Rennes, 35042 France
Abstract:Present biodiversity comprises the evolutionary heritage of Earth's epochs. Lineages from particular epochs are often found in particular habitats, but whether current habitat decline threatens the heritage from particular epochs is unknown. We hypothesized that within a given region, humans threaten specifically habitats that harbor lineages from a particular geological epoch. We expect so because humans threaten environments that dominated and lineages that diversified during these epochs. We devised a new approach to quantify, per habitat type, diversification of lineages from different epochs. For Netherlands, one of the floristically and ecologically best-studied regions, we quantified the decline of habitat types and species in the past century. We defined habitat types based on vegetation classification and used existing ranking of decline of vegetation classes and species. Currently, most declining habitat types and the group of red-listed species are characterized by increased diversification of lineages dating back to Paleogene, specifically to Paleocene-Eocene and Oligocene. Among vulnerable habitat types with large representation of lineages from these epochs were sublittoral and eulittoral zones of temperate seas and 2 types of nutrient-poor, open habitats. These losses of evolutionary heritage would go unnoticed with classical measures of evolutionary diversity. Loss of heritage from Paleocene-Eocene became unrelated to decline once low competition, shade tolerance, and low proportion of non-Apiaceae were accounted for, suggesting that these variables explain the loss of heritage from Paleocene-Eocene. Losses of heritage from Oligocene were partly explained by decline of habitat types occupied by weak competitors and shade-tolerant species. Our results suggest a so-far unappreciated human threat to evolutionary heritage: habitat decline threatens descendants from particular epochs. If the trends persist into the future uncontrolled, there may be no habitats within the region for many descendants of evolutionary ancient epochs, such as Paleogene.
Keywords:abiotic and biotic constraints  biodiversity conservation  decline of habitat types  epoch-specific phylogenetic diversification  paleoecological inference  Paleogene  conservación de la biodiversidad  declinación de los tipos de hábitat  diversificación filogenética específica de la época  inferencia paleoecológica  limitaciones bióticas y abióticas  Paleógeno  非生物与生物制约  生物多样性保护  地质时期特异的系统发育多样化  生境类型减少  古生态推断  古第三纪
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