Felipe Ennes Silva
Impact of Quaternary Amazonian river dynamics on the diversification of uakari monkeys (genus Cacajao)
Silva, Felipe Ennes; Luna, Leilton Willians; Batista, Romina; Röhe, Fabio; Gubili, Chrysoula; Farias, Izeni P.; Hrbek, Tomas; Valsecchi, João; Ribas, Camila C.; McDevitt, Allan D.; Dellicour, Simon; Flot, Jean‐François; Boubli, Jean P.
Authors
Leilton Willians Luna
Miss Romina Batista R.D.S.D.S.Batista@salford.ac.uk
Fabio Röhe
Chrysoula Gubili
Izeni P. Farias
Tomas Hrbek
João Valsecchi
Camila C. Ribas
Allan D. McDevitt
Simon Dellicour
Jean‐François Flot
Prof Jean Boubli J.P.Boubli@salford.ac.uk
Professor
Abstract
AimThe central and western Amazonia underwent several landscape changes during the Quaternary. Whereas the Riverine Barrier Hypothesis is traditionally used to explain the influence of rivers on speciation, processes such as river rearrangements have been overlooked to explain the geographic distribution and evolutionary history of Amazonia biota. Here, we tested how river rearrangements influenced the evolutionary history of uakari monkeys, genus Cacajao, a primate genus primarily associated with seasonally flooded forests in central and western Amazonia.LocationCentral and Western Amazonia.TaxonThe genus Cacajao, including the black uakaris (C. melanocephalus, C. ayresi, C. hosomi); and the bald‐headed uakaris (C. calvus, C. amuna, C. rubicundus, C. ucayalii, C. novaesi).MethodsWe performed a continuous phylogeographic analysis using 77 cytochrome b sequences to identify the origin and dispersal of Cacajao lineages. We used genome‐wide SNP variation (ddRADseq) to investigate population structure, gene flow and demographic history in Cacajao populations and used digital elevation models to identify landscape and riverscape characteristics that may have influenced the geographic distribution of Cacajao.ResultsOur continuous phylogeographic reconstruction pointed out that the ancestral Cacajao lineage occupied the flooded forests of the Solimões River, in central Amazonia, at ~1.7 Mya and descendant lineages dispersed throughout central and western Amazonia more recently. We identified gene flow in both black and bald‐headed uakari populations, even across rivers considered barriers (e.g. the Negro River). Landscape analysis showed that river rearrangements influenced the geographic distribution and population structure in Cacajao. Historical demographic analyses suggest varied scenarios of population size changes among Cacajao monkeys consistent with periods of intense dynamism in flooded habitats and the formation of non‐flooded upland forests.Main ConclusionOur results support that the river rearrangements have shaped the geographic distribution and divergence of recently diverged Cacajao lineages. Landscape and riverscape changes, along with retractions of the flooded forests, isolated some Cacajao populations in floodplain areas. Our study also suggests that these events led to the recent changes in demographic histories in species with a restricted geographic distribution.
Citation
Silva, F. E., Luna, L. W., Batista, R., Röhe, F., Gubili, C., Farias, I. P., …Boubli, J. P. (in press). Impact of Quaternary Amazonian river dynamics on the diversification of uakari monkeys (genus Cacajao). Journal of Biogeography, https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14844
Journal Article Type | Article |
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Acceptance Date | Mar 22, 2024 |
Online Publication Date | Apr 8, 2024 |
Deposit Date | Jun 6, 2024 |
Journal | Journal of Biogeography |
Print ISSN | 0305-0270 |
Publisher | Wiley |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14844 |
Keywords | Ecology, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics |
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