Phylogenetic signal in flowering phenology weakens over elevation in the
high Andes of Chile: evidence for evolutionary convergence in a harsh
habitat
Abstract
In alpine ecosystems, greater overlap in flowering phenology among
species at higher elevations could be due to evolutionary convergence
among lineages or environmental filtering for taxa preadapted to colder
conditions. We hypothesize that the flowering phenology of high alpine
communities, subjected to colder and shorter reproductive seasons, is
the result of convergence due to strong selective pressure imposed by
the environment rather than environmental filtering for conservated
traits. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed phylogenetic signal for
first flowering date, peak flowering date, flowering duration and
thermal sums to first and peak flowering and community phylogenetic
structure considering Mean Nearest Taxon Distance (MNTD) and Mean
Pairwise Distance (MPD) on four sites encompassing a total of 86 species
derived from the subalpine and high alpine in the central Chilean Andes.
After discarding possible richness effects on phylogenetic signal, the
high alpine sites continued to show significant phylogenetic signal for
a smaller number of floral traits than the subalpine sites. This was
particularly evident for thermal sums. The two high elevation
communities show significant values of SES(MNTD) but not for SES(MPD),
indicating clustering related to the tips of the phylogeny. Overall,
results suggest that environmental filtering for preadapted lineages is
not the main driver of the phylogenetic structure and composition in
high alpine communities. Rather, species at higher elevation have been
subjected to greater environmental pressures leading to trait
convergence. We conclude that phylogenetic conservatism in floral
phenology has been overridden by the harsh environmental conditions in
the high Andes. The high alpine environment can be seen as an
evolutionary promoter rather than a gatekeeper of lineages preadapted to
cold conditions.