Stability Predicts Genetic Diversity in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest Hotspot
Queens College, CUNY · Museum of Vertebrate Zoology · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Biodiversity hotspots, representing regions with high species endemism and conservation threat, have been mapped globally. Yet, biodiversity distribution data from within hotspots are too sparse for effective conservation in the face of rapid environmental change. Using frogs as indicators, ecological niche models under paleoclimates, and simultaneous Bayesian analyses of multispecies molecular data, we compare alternative hypotheses of assemblage-scale response to late Quaternary climate change. This reveals a hotspot within the Brazilian Atlantic forest hotspot. We show that the southern Atlantic forest was climatically unstable relative to the central region, which served as a large climatic refugium for…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 87.15
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
5- ACAna Carolina CarnavalCorresponding
Queens College, CUNY, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, Universidade de São Paulo, Instituto de Geociencias, University of California, Berkeley
- MJMichael J. Hickerson
Queens College, CUNY, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, Universidade de São Paulo, Instituto de Geociencias, University of California, Berkeley
- CFCélio F. B. Haddad
Queens College, CUNY, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, Universidade de São Paulo, Instituto de Geociencias, University of California, Berkeley
- MTMiguel Tréfaut Rodrigues
Queens College, CUNY, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, Universidade de São Paulo, Instituto de Geociencias, University of California, Berkeley
- CMCraig Moritz
Queens College, CUNY, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, Universidade de São Paulo, Instituto de Geociencias, University of California, Berkeley
Topics & keywords
- Biodiversity hotspot
- Biodiversity
- Endemism
- Hotspot (geology)
- Geography
- Ecology
- Atlantic forest
- Environmental niche modelling