Evolution and the latitudinal diversity gradient: speciation, extinction and biogeography

Gary G. Mittelbach(Michigan State University), Douglas W. Schemske(Michigan State University), Howard V. Cornell(University of California, Davis), Andrew P. Allen(University of California, Santa Barbara), J. Mark Brown(Grinnell College), Mark B. Bush(Florida Institute of Technology), Susan Harrison(University of California, Davis), Allen H. Hurlbert(University of California, Santa Barbara), Nancy­ Knowlton­(University of California San Diego), H. A. Lessios(Smithsonian Institution), Christy M. McCain(University of California, Santa Barbara), Amy R. McCune(Cornell University), Lucinda A. McDade(Pennsylvania Academy of Science), Mark A. McPeek(Dartmouth College), Thomas J. Near(Yale University), Trevor D. Price(University of Chicago), Robert E. Ricklefs(University of Missouri), Kaustuv Roy(University of California San Diego), Dov F. Sax, Dolph Schluter(University of British Columbia), James M. Sobel(Michigan State University), Michael Turelli(University of California, Davis)
Ecology Letters
February 20, 2007
Cited by 1,740Open Access
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Abstract

A latitudinal gradient in biodiversity has existed since before the time of the dinosaurs, yet how and why this gradient arose remains unresolved. Here we review two major hypotheses for the origin of the latitudinal diversity gradient. The time and area hypothesis holds that tropical climates are older and historically larger, allowing more opportunity for diversification. This hypothesis is supported by observations that temperate taxa are often younger than, and nested within, tropical taxa, and that diversity is positively correlated with the age and area of geographical regions. The diversification rate hypothesis holds that tropical regions diversify faster due to higher rates of speciation (caused by increased opportunities for the evolution of reproductive isolation, or faster molecular evolution, or the increased importance of biotic interactions), or due to lower extinction rates. There is phylogenetic evidence for higher rates of diversification in tropical clades, and palaeontological data demonstrate higher rates of origination for tropical taxa, but mixed evidence for latitudinal differences in extinction rates. Studies of latitudinal variation in incipient speciation also suggest faster speciation in the tropics. Distinguishing the roles of history, speciation and extinction in the origin of the latitudinal gradient represents a major challenge to future research.


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