Document of bibliographic reference 294597

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Phylogenetic analysis of trophic niche evolution reveals a latitudinal herbivory gradient in Clupeoidei (herrings, anchovies, and allies)
Abstract
Biotic and abiotic forces govern the evolution of trophic niches, which profoundly impact ecological and evolutionary processes and aspects of species biology. Herbivory is a particularly interesting trophic niche because there are theorized trade-offs associated with diets comprised of low quality food that might prevent the evolution of herbivory in certain environments. Herbivory has also been identified as a potential evolutionary "dead-end" that hinders subsequent trophic diversification. For this study we investigated trophic niche evolution in Clupeoidei (anchovies, sardines, herrings, and their relatives) and tested the hypotheses that herbivory is negatively correlated with salinity and latitude using a novel, time-calibrated molecular phylogeny, trophic guilds delimited using diet data and cluster analysis, and standard and phylogenetically-informed statistical methods. We identified eight clupeoid trophic guilds: molluscivore, terrestrial invertivore, phytoplanktivore, macroalgivore, detritivore, piscivore, crustacivore, and zooplanktivore. Standard statistical methods found a significant negative correlation between latitude and the proportion of herbivorous clupeoids (herbivorous clupeoid species/total clupeoid species), but no significant difference in the proportion of herbivorous clupeoids between freshwater and marine environments. Phylogenetic least squares regression did not identify significant negative correlations between latitude and herbivory or salinity and herbivory. In clupeoids there were five evolutionary transitions from non-herbivore to herbivore guilds and no transitions from herbivore to non-herbivore guilds. There were no transitions to zooplanktivore, the most common guild, but it gave rise to all trophic guilds, except algivore, at least once. Transitions to herbivory comprised a significantly greater proportion of diet transitions in tropical and subtropical (<35°) relative to temperate areas (>35°). Our findings suggest cold temperatures may constrain the evolution of herbivory and that herbivory might act as an evolutionary "dead-end" that hinders subsequent trophic diversification, while zooplanktivory acts as an evolutionary "cradle" that facilitates trophic diversification.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000430138000014
Bibliographic citation
Egan, J.P.; Bloom, D.; Kuo, C.-H.; Hammer, M.P.; Tongnunui, P.; Iglésias, S.P.; Sheaves, M.; Grudpan, C.; Simons, A.M. (2018). Phylogenetic analysis of trophic niche evolution reveals a latitudinal herbivory gradient in Clupeoidei (herrings, anchovies, and allies). Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 124: 151-161. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2018.03.011
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
Joshua Egan
author
Name
Devin Bloom
author
Name
Chien-Hsien Kuo
author
Name
Michael Hammer
author
Name
Prasert Tongnunui
author
Name
Samuel Iglésias
author
Name
Marcus Sheaves
author
Name
Chaiwut Grudpan
author
Name
Andrew Simons

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2018.03.011

Document metadata

date created
2018-04-10
date modified
2018-05-07