The origins of tropical marine biodiversity
| DOI | 10.1016/j.tree.2013.01.018 |
|---|---|
| Year | 2013 |
| Journal | Trends in Ecology & Evolution |
| Volume | 28 |
| Number | 6 |
| Pages | 359-366 |
| Type | article in journal |
| Language | English |
| Id | 54091 |
Abstract
Recent phylogeographic studies have overturned three paradigms for the origins of marine biodiversity. (i) Physical (allopatric) isolation is not the sole avenue for marine speciation: many species diverge along ecological boundaries. (ii) Peripheral habitats such as oceanic archipelagos are not evolutionary graveyards: these regions can export biodiversity. (iii) Speciation in marine and terrestrial ecosystems follow similar processes but are not the same: opportunities for allopatric isolation are fewer in the oceans, leaving greater opportunity for speciation along ecological boundaries. Biodiversity hotspots such as the Caribbean Sea and the Indo-Pacific Coral Triangle produce and export species, but can also accumulate biodiversity produced in peripheral habitats. Both hotspots and peripheral ecosystems benefit from this exchange in a process dubbed biodiversity feedback.