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Evolutionary opportunity and the limits of community similarity in replicate radiations of island lizards
  • Luke Frishkoff,
  • Gavia Lertzman-Lepofsky,
  • D. Luke Mahler
Luke Frishkoff
The University of Texas at Arlington

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Gavia Lertzman-Lepofsky
University of Toronto
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D. Luke Mahler
University of Toronto
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Abstract

Ecological community structure ultimately depends on evolution producing community members. To understand how macroevolutionary processes shape communities, we surveyed Anolis lizard assemblages across elevations on Jamaica and Hispaniola, neighboring Caribbean islands similar in environment, but contrasting in evolutionary richness. The impact of diversification on local communities depends on available opportunities for speciation within or between ecologically distinct sub-regions. Where opportunities abound, as in the vast lowlands of both islands, communities converge in species richness and average morphology. But community structures diverge in the highlands. On Jamaica, where limited highland area restricted diversification, communities remain depauperate and consist largely of elevational generalists. In contrast, a unique fauna of high-elevation specialists evolved in the expansive Hispaniolan highlands, augmenting highland richness, and driving islandwide turnover in community composition. Accounting for disparate evolutionary opportunities may illuminate when regional diversity will enhance local diversity and help identify the causes of convergent versus divergent community structure.
Nov 2022Published in Ecology Letters volume 25 issue 11 on pages 2384-2396. 10.1111/ele.14098