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Original Articles

Phylogenetic conservatism of abiotic niche in sympatric Southwestern Atlantic skates

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Pages 458-473 | Received 18 Jun 2020, Accepted 09 Oct 2020, Published online: 26 Nov 2020
 

ABSTRACT

From the perspective of phylogenetic niche conservatism (PNC), closely related species must share more aspects of a niche than randomly expected. However, considering the competitive exclusion principle, PNC is questionable for related species in sympatry. This research aimed to test PNC in Riorajini, a tribe of four skates endemic to the Southwestern Atlantic Ocean: Atlantoraja castelnaui, A. cyclophora, A. platana, and Rioraja agassizii. We updated available distribution maps for these species with literature data, reconstructed the phylogenetic relationships of the group with genetic data (mt-nd2), modelled the ecological niche (ENM) of each species, and calculated niche overlap, equivalency and similarity between models. The results recovered Riorajini as a monophyletic group and indicated PNC with bathymetry, distance to shore and concentration of nitrate characterizing the tribe's abiotic niche. However, no linear relationship between phylogenetic proximity and niche similarity was clear since pairs of species more phylogenetically distant showed more similar niches (R. agassizii and A. castelnaui, > 70% niche similarity, P < 0.005) than congeners (A. castelnaui and A. platana, 45%, P < 0.005). ENMs of each species showed different responses to variations in environmental predictors, with A. castelnaui and R. agassizii showing higher probability of occurrence in shallower waters, closer to shore, while A. cyclophora and A. platana explore deeper areas, although still constrained to the continental shelf. We discuss how these differences influence the distribution of each species in the environment and used the phylogeny to argue that R. agassizii and A. castelnaui share a conserved niche from an ancestral lineage.

Acknowledgements

We thank Pablo Ariel Martinez, Maria Cristina Oddone, Juan Pablo Zurano and Françoise Dantas de Lima for their valuable comments in previous versions of the manuscript.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

JFRC and FFP received financial support from the Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior – Brasil (CAPES) – Finance Code 001. SMQL receives Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico research productivity grant (313644/2018-7). FFP received financial support from the Fulbright Commission in Brazil.

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