Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/14863
Title: Riverine barriers and the geographic distribution of Amazonian species
Authors: Gascon, Claude
Malcolm, Jay R.
Patton, James L.
Silva, Maria Nazareth Ferreira da
Bogart, James P.
Lougheed, Stephen C.
Peres, Carlos A.
Neckel, Selvino
Boag, Peter T.
Keywords: Biodiversity
Controlled Study
Forest
Frog
Genetic Variability
Geographic Distribution
Mammal
Nonhuman
Priority Journal
River
South America
Species Differentiation
Animal
Ecology
Geography
South America
Species Specificity
Anura
Mammalia
Issue Date: 2000
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 97, Número 25, Pags. 13672-13677
Abstract: Rivers have been suggested to have played an important role in shaping present-day patterns of ecological and genetic variation among Amazonian species and communities. Recent molecular studies have provided mixed support for the hypothesis that large lowland Amazonian rivers have functioned as significant impediments to gene flow among populations of neotropical species. To date, no study has systematically evaluated the impact that riverine barriers might have on structuring whole Amazonian communities. Our analyses of the phylogeography of frogs and small mammals indicate that a putative riverine barrier (the Jurua River) does not relate to present-day patterns of community similarity and species richness. Rather, our results imply a significant impact of the Andean orogenic axis and associated thrust-and-fold low-land dynamics in shaping patterns of biotic diversity along the Jurua. Combined results of this and other studies significantly weaken the postulated role of rivers as major drivers of Amazonian diversification.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1073/pnas.230136397
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