Overview: the convergence of “Discrete” disciplines
Biogeography and macroecology were, until recently, treated as separate disciplines with discrete aims and identities (e.g., Blackburn and Gaston, 2002; Wiens and Donoghue, 2004). This was largely based on the fact that biogeography is considered as the science of documenting and understanding spatial patterns of biodiversity, which tends to have an historical focus, while macroecology, in studying relationships between/among organisms and their environment, is generally considered to address contemporary questions (McIntosh, 1986; Blackburn and Gaston, 2002; Lomolino et al., 2010). But there has been a growing awareness that the two disciplines can, and do, converge, particularly at intermediate spatial and temporal scales (e.g., Ricklefs, 2007; Cavender-Bares et al., 2009; Jenkins and Ricklefs, 2011; Ricklefs and Jenkins, 2011).
With this convergence, it has become apparent that multidisciplinary studies can be instrumental in providing a deeper understanding of pertinent evolutionary questions (Saslis-Lagoudakis and Greve, 2011; Villalobos and Paknia, 2011). For example, past changes in environmental conditions (e.g., climate, plate tectonics), and the phylogenetic history of organisms, are two traditional components of biogeographic study, but these both also feed into explanations for current biotic patterns of distribution and abundance, i.e., macroecology (Jablonski, 2008; Wiens et al., 2010). Some authors have gone so far as to argue that important contemporary topics in macroecology can only be understood when historical and evolutionary (biogeographic) effects are considered (Ricklefs, 2004; Wiens and Donoghue, 2004). This commentary will discuss integration of macroecology and biogeography from the perspective of using intraspecific processes to inform interspecific patterns. In particular, I will argue that population genetics/genomics data can provide the glue to bond the two fields together to better inform macro-evolutionary research.
Species or populations; top-down or bottom-up?
Macroecology and biogeography are, at heart, species-focused. Each uses analysis of species to explain patterns relating to distributions, diversity gradients (Adler et al., 2005; Hawkins et al., 2007), range size distributions (McPherson et al., 2004; Svenning and Skov, 2004; Beck et al., 2006; Morin and Chuine, 2006), and phylogenetic relationships (Winter et al., 2009; Cadotte et al., 2010; Capellini et al., 2010; Wiens et al., 2010). This essentially relates to the use of a top-down approach, whereby insights into complex systems are gained by breaking them down into their various sub-components (Friedman, 1974; Salmon, 1984). Bottom-up science, on the other hand, involves merging the sub-components together to build a complex, system-level understanding (Friedman, 1974; Salmon, 1984). The two approaches are often considered to be mutually exclusive, and yet, like the historical and ahistorical divisions of biogeography and macroecology, they essentially exist along a continuum of interpretation.
In this age of massive data gathering, particularly with respect to next-generation sequencing (NGS) of genetic data, there lies an opportunity for exploiting bottom-up approaches to address top-down questions, and thereby doing away entirely with unhelpful divisions among scientific disciplines. Indeed, the incorporation of molecular phylogenetic data into biogeographic approaches has informed knowledge about species distribution patterns and dispersal routes (Roncal et al., 2011; Saslis-Lagoudakis and Greve, 2011; Hernández et al., 2013), and important biogeographic insights have been gained by combining population genetic and landscape (i.e., phylogeographic) data with ecological niche modeling (e.g., Alvarado-Serrano and Knowles, 2013). Moreover, recent work has pushed for the unification of ecology and macroevolution (e.g., Rominger et al., 2015; Rosindell et al., 2015), and for the derivation of ecological inferences from population and/or community-level diversity (e.g., Pauls et al., 2014; Vellend et al., 2014). However, these approaches generally represent the use of species-level (i.e., phylogenetic) data in biogeography, and of population- or species-level data into macroecology. Thus far, little attention has focused on incorporating intraspecific (population-level) data into studies that include both historical (i.e., biogeography) and contemporary (i.e., macroecology) components (but see below). Such an approach would drive an understanding of evolutionary processes acting over both contemporary and historical scales across taxa into a systems-level understanding of patterns observed in complex systems (Figure 1).
Figure 1
Population genomic data are relevant to systems-level insights
Although biogeography and macroecology generally focus on understanding patterns at the meta-scale, incorporation of population-level data is necessary if these patterns are to inform us about how species have responded to environments in the past and enable us to predict how they will respond in the future (Passy, 2008; Hendriks et al., 2009). Recent modeling work has begun to take individual-based approaches toward testing large-scale patterns (e.g., Zurell et al., 2009; Buchmann et al., 2011; Fordham et al., 2014; Rosindell et al., 2015), even including processes such as adaptive potential into models of species distribution (Catullo et al., 2015). Others have argued for the incorporation of macroecological mechanisms, such as dispersal limitation, in biogeographic predictions (Gotelli et al., 2009). On the other hand, traditionally intraspecific landscape genomic studies are beginning to take comparative, multi-species approaches in recognition of the fact that general landscape effects on local adaptation and gene flow cannot be obtained from single-species studies (Thomassen et al., 2011; Manel and Holderegger, 2013). In the following paragraphs, I present three case studies that exemplify the ways in which population-level data can be used to facilitate understanding of macroecological and biogeographic patterns.
Hjalmarsson et al. (2015) used a comparative population genetic and phylogeographic approach to address a biogeographic and macroecological hypothesis that lentic (still water) species have higher dispersal rates that lotic (running water) species, as a result of the more ephemeral nature of the lentic habitat. These authors compared population genetic structure of 59 species of aquatic beetles from Madagascar, finding that lentic species have lower genetic structure (i.e., disperse more). The suggestion that lotic species are poorer dispersers has important implications for conservation of freshwater fauna as ephemeral habitats become increasingly isolated in the face of climate change (Hjalmarsson et al., 2015). By bringing a population focus to a macroecological question, this work demonstrates the usefulness of comparative intra-specific data in addressing macroevolutionary and biogeographical hypotheses.
Dexter et al. (2012) took a population genetics approach to look at alternative explanations for a community-level pattern of species compositions in the Amazon rainforest. Specifically, these authors identified clear genetic breaks within species of trees in the Inga genus that suggested population divergence had occurred tens to hundreds of thousands of years ago. Such a time scale effectively replaced a hypothesis of species sorting along an environmental gradient with one in which highly diverged species had come back into secondary contact (Dexter et al., 2012). By simultaneously studying biogeographic species patterns and population genetic data, these authors gained novel insights into the processes structuring patterns of spatial diversity. Other studies combining genetic with biogeographic and/or macroecological data have made similar advances in inferring the processes underlying spatial diversity (e.g., Bonada et al., 2009; Thiel-Egenter et al., 2011; Eldon et al., 2013).
Finally, Branco et al. (2015) studied coastal and mountain populations of the Californian fungus, Suillus brevipes, using NGS to reveal unprecedented cryptic speciation and recent divergence of the isolated populations. Just 0.01% of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were fixed between the two populations; despite this low divergence, phenotypic variation had begun to characterize the two populations, with a gene potentially involved in enhanced salt tolerance in acidic conditions fixed in the coastal, but not the mountain, populations (Branco et al., 2015). This suggests that a selection-based hypothesis might explain the biogeography and macroecology of the two fungal populations, thus demonstrating how comparative population genomic approaches can yield insight into larger scale diversification and ecological processes. Correlating genomic data with ecological variables is a powerful approach toward detecting the genes underlying adaptation across populations and subspecies (e.g., Cox et al., 2011; Hancock et al., 2011; Jones et al., 2012; Bergland et al., 2014). By identifying the genetic drivers of speciation and increasing understanding of which ecological factors are relevant for adaptation, population genomics can inform about what will become the biogeographic and macroecological patterns of the future.
Future considerations
In a very general sense, it seems obvious that interactions at the level of phenotype and environment within and between species (i.e., microevolution), are prevalent drivers of distribution and abundance gradients that should be considered in biogeography and macroecology (Figure 1). But, how might a bottom-up approach (i.e., microevolution) explicitly inform these two fields in practice? In addition to the examples above, where population genetics or genomics data, have been applied to top-down questions, there are two other schools of thought that could contribute to such an endeavor: (i) community genetics; and (ii) co-evolutionary mosaics. Community genetics is a growing field that seeks to bridge community ecology and evolutionary biology by investigating how genetic diversity within populations of a single species may affect overall community composition (and it's flip side: how communities may shape the genetic diversity of their constituent species; Whitham et al., 2006). Concepts from community genetics have already been applied toward understanding the effects of genetic diversity on ecosystem function (Whitham et al., 2003; Schweitzer et al., 2004). Co-evolutionary mosaics refer to a different level of interaction. Rather than the interplay between population diversity and community function, the focus is toward the biotic interactions between species. In particular, the long-term dynamics of co-evolution underlie the co-evolutionary mosaics framework, with the idea that these interactions occur over a broad geographic range rather than just locally within populations (Thompson, 2005). In other words, the biotic interactions between species, and not just the species themselves, are considered as the raw material for the overall direction of co-evolution, and genes favored in local interactions can spread out into other populations to create regional patterns (Thompson, 2005).
These ideas form a good foundation for further incorporation of microevolutionary ideas into macroevolutionary research, and each rely on the generation of population genetic or genomic data to achieve an understanding of population variance. Marrying diversity data with population data pertinent to phenotypic trait variance and adaptive potential will also allow researchers to start building holistic population datasets that can be combined to create an ecosystem perspective. Generating this data will require coordinated efforts to apply NGS and other methods across a wide spectrum, encompassing bottom-up and top-down scales. Indeed, NGS databases for a number of organisms are accruing, such that comparing genetic data of multiple species to test hypotheses about the processes that govern large-scale community and ecosystem patterns is becoming feasible (Johnson and Boerlijst, 2002; Hohenlohe et al., 2010; Kelly and Palumbi, 2010).
Final remarks
A highly significant output of biogeographic and macroecological research is the understanding of relationships between organisms and their environments as drivers of spatial diversity. In today's world, the relevance of this information to conservation approaches cannot be over-stated. Yet, the mechanisms underlying meta-patterns represent an assemblage of processes operating across the landscape at a finer scale; in general, population patterns ultimately form species patterns (Figure 1). In order to truly understand the limits of species distributions, we must understand the development of life history traits and evolutionary potential among taxa, as well as the interactions within and among species, as it is these that define the optimal limits in which organisms reside, both now and in the future. Population genomic data can provide key insights into phenotypic trait variation and adaptive potential that may promote future species responses to environmental change, as well as tell us how groups of related taxa have responded across historical and contemporary scales to reach their current distribution extents. Concepts from community genetics and co-evolutionary mosaics can also provide us with a framework to associate genetic diversity within populations to greater regional landscape patterns. Crucial to exploring all of these possibilities, and hence for ultimately predicting future biogeography and macroecology, is knowledge of population genetic parameters across multiple populations and species. By incorporating a more holistic view that includes the use of bottom-up genomic approaches to get at the finer-scale processes that underlie broad-scale patterns, scientists can better bridge the gap toward a comprehensive understanding of macro-evolutionary research.
Conflict of interest statement
The author declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Statements
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank Craig Moritz for enlightening discussion around community genetics and co-evolutionary mosaics. I would also like to thank Craig, along with Peter Alan Ritchie and Kevin C. Burns, for critically reviewing an earlier draft of this manuscript.
Conflict of interest
The author declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
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Summary
Keywords
adaptive potential, biogeography, integration, macroecology, population genomics, phenotypic plasticity
Citation
McGaughran A (2015) Integrating a Population Genomics Focus into Biogeographic and Macroecological Research. Front. Ecol. Evol. 3:132. doi: 10.3389/fevo.2015.00132
Received
21 May 2015
Accepted
09 November 2015
Published
26 November 2015
Volume
3 - 2015
Edited by
Kevin C. Burns, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Reviewed by
Peter Alan Ritchie, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Updates
Copyright
© 2015 McGaughran.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Angela McGaughran ang.mcgaughran@gmail.com
This article was submitted to Biogeography and Macroecology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
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