Published January 10, 2020 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Environmental filtering and convergent evolution determine the ecological specialisation of subterranean spiders

  • 1. Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique
  • 2. Instituto de Investigaciones Químicas y Ambientales de Barcelona
  • 3. Hospital das Clínicas da Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo
  • 4. Prirodnjacki Muzej Crne Gore
  • 5. University of Turin

Description

1. Ecological specialisation is an important mechanism enhancing species coexistence within a given community. Yet, unravelling the effect of multiple selective evolutionary and ecological factors leading the process of specialisation remains a key challenge in ecology. Subterranean habitats provide highly replicated experimental arenas in which to disentangle the relative contribution of evolutionary history (convergent evolution vs character displacement) and ecological setting (environmental filtering vs competitive exclusion) in driving community assembly. 2. We tested alternative hypotheses about the emergence of ecological specialisation using the radiation of a lineage of sheet-weaver cave-dwelling spiders as model system. We observed that at the local scale, a differential specialisation to cave microhabitats generally parallels moderate levels of morphological similarity and close phylogenetic relatedness among species. Conversely, geographic distance contributed little in explaining microhabitat occupation, possibly mirroring a limited role of competitive exclusion. Yet, compared to non-coexisting species, co-occurring species adapted to different microhabitats showed lower morphological niche overlap (i.e. higher dissimilarity) and deeper genetic distance. 3. The framework here developed suggests that in the subterranean domain, habitat specialisation is primarily driven by environmental filtering, secondarily by convergent evolution, and only marginally by character displacement or competitive exclusion. This pattern results in the establishment of replicated communities across geographical space, composed by ecologically equivalent species. Such process of community assembly well explains the numerous adaptive radiations observed in subterranean habitats, an eco-evolutionary pattern well documented in oceanic islands or mountain summit communities.

Notes

Funding provided by: Compagnia di San Paolo
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100007388
Award Number: Bando per l'Internazionalizzazione della Ricerca – Anno 2018

Funding provided by: Compagnia di San Paolo
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100007388
Award Number: CSTO162355

Funding provided by: Università degli Studi di Torino
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100006692
Award Number: CSTO162355

Funding provided by: Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity
Crossref Funder Registry ID:
Award Number: CGL2016-80651-P

Funding provided by: Catalan Government
Crossref Funder Registry ID:
Award Number: 2017SGR83

Funding provided by: Slovenian Research Agency
Crossref Funder Registry ID:
Award Number: Programme P1-0184

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