Trophic innovations fuel reef fish diversification

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Siqueira, Alexandre C.;Morais, Renato A.;Bellwood, David R.;Cowman, Peter F.
Abstract

Reef fishes are an exceptionally speciose vertebrate assemblage, yet the main drivers of their diversification remain unclear. It has been suggested that Miocene reef rearrangements promoted opportunities for lineage diversification, however, the specific mechanisms are not well understood. Here, we assemble near-complete reef fish phylogenies to assess the importance of ecological and geographical factors in explaining lineage origination patterns. We reveal that reef fish diversification is strongly associated with species’ trophic identity and body size. Large-bodied herbivorous fishes outpace all other trophic groups in recent diversification rates, a pattern that is consistent through time. Additionally, we show that omnivory acts as an intermediate evolutionary step between higher and lower trophic levels, while planktivory represents a common transition destination. Overall, these results suggest that Miocene changes in reef configurations were likely driven by, and subsequently promoted, trophic innovations. This highlights trophic evolution as a key element in enhancing reef fish diversification.

Journal

Nature Communications

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11

ISBN/ISSN

2041-1723

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Pages Count

11

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Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

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DOI

10.1038/s41467-020-16498-w