Climatic-niche evolution with key morphological innovations across
clades within Scutiger boulengeri (Anura: Megophryidae)
Abstract
The studies of climatic-niche shifts over evolutionary time accompanied
by key morphological innovations have attracted the interest of many
researchers recently. We analyzed the realized niche dynamics across
clades within Scutiger boulengeri using ecological niche models
(ENMs), ordination method (environment principal component analysis;
PCA-env), and correspondingly key morphological innovations combined
phylogenetic comparative methods (PCMs) and phylogenetic generalized
least squares (PGLS) regression methods throughout their distributions
in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP) margins of China in Asia. Our analyses
reveal that there is obvious niche divergence caused by niche expansion
across S. boulengeri clades, especially in E. A, E. B and partial
of E. C clades. Moreover, niche expansion is more popular than niche
unfilling into novel environmental conditions. Annual mean temperature
and Annual precipitation are the most important contributors in E. A and
E. B clades, while Precipitation of driest month is most likely to be
the leading limited factor in these two regions according to jackknife
test of variable importance. In addition, we identified several key
ecological and morphological traits that tend to be associated with
niche expansion in S. boulengeri clades correspondingly.
Specifically, we found that Elevation, Isothermality, Mean diurnal range
and Max temperature of warmest month are significantly negative
predictors of snout–vent length (SVL) under phylogenetic models, while
the S. boulengeri toads from warmer and more arid environments
tend to be larger. There seems to a trade-off strategy by trait covary
of locomotor performance combined with enlarged SVL, which provide us a
potential pattern of how a colonizing toad might seed a novel habit to
begin the process of speciation and finally adaptive radiation. It is
worth noting that we should not overlook that the Tibet continuously
growing and moving northward over millions of years has laid the
foundation for early divergence of clades within S. boulengeri.