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Articles

Using floristics, modern systematics and phylogenetics for disentangling biodiversity hotspots across scales: a Mediterranean case study

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Pages 1293-1310 | Received 08 Feb 2018, Accepted 20 Feb 2018, Published online: 07 Mar 2018
 

Abstract

Biodiversity comprises various levels of biological organisation. Global patterns of biodiversity are well established based on species occurrence. However, functional and historical processes underlying biodiversity patterns have been only recently approached. The increasingly active field of phylogenetics has allowed the rise of phylofloristic studies to help in elucidating the historical, evolutionary causes of plant biodiversity in addition to most commonly approached ecological correlates. Here, we review recent phylogeny-based studies disentangling the role of eco-geographic and historical factors on the biodiversity patterns of the Baetic–Rifan range and exemplify the use of barcoding to explore the evolutionary assembly of woody flora in the Spanish Sierra Nevada mountain range super-hotspot. Our species-level DNA barcoding approach resulted in a phylogeny potentially improving refinement of hypotheses in comparison with previous approaches based on phylogenies at genus level, and providing insights into the woody flora of Sierra Nevada subjected to systematic discussion. We show that the roles of elevation and substrate in biodiversity distribution vary according to the biodiversity component considered and also between endemic and non-endemic flora. We aim to illustrate how modern methods can further our understanding of the mechanisms underlying the assemblage of species and, consequently, the conservation of biodiversity.

Acknowledgements

We thank the “Hoya de Pedraza” Botanical Garden staff for their collaboration in sampling the woody flora of Sierra Nevada. We thank Andalusian Scientific Information Technology Center (CICA, Seville, Spain) and the Biology and Herbarium Services of the Center for Technological Research and Innovation of the University of Seville (CITIUS) for providing computational and research resources. Juan Carlos Rubio (IGME, Granada) provided indispensable geological information for the field work in Sierra Nevada. The Sierra Nevada National Park staff provided all logistic support and permits for making these studies possible. This contribution largely resulted from the invitation of Lorenzo Peruzzi (University of Pisa) to contribute to the 111th Congress of the Italian Botanical Society and 3rd International Plant Science Conference (IPSC), held at Rome in September 2016.

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