Historical biogeography supports Point Conception as the site of turnover between temperate East Pacific ichthyofaunas.

The cold temperate and subtropical marine faunas of the Northeastern Pacific meet within California as part of one of the few eastern boundary upwelling ecosystems in the world. Traditionally, it is believed that Point Conception is the precise site of turnover between these two faunas due to sharp...

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Main Author: Elizabeth Christina Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2023-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291776
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author Elizabeth Christina Miller
author_facet Elizabeth Christina Miller
author_sort Elizabeth Christina Miller
collection DOAJ
description The cold temperate and subtropical marine faunas of the Northeastern Pacific meet within California as part of one of the few eastern boundary upwelling ecosystems in the world. Traditionally, it is believed that Point Conception is the precise site of turnover between these two faunas due to sharp changes in oceanographic conditions. However, evidence from intraspecific phylogeography and species range terminals do not support this view, finding stronger biogeographic breaks elsewhere along the coast. Here I develop a new application of historical biogeographic approaches to uncover sites of transition between faunas without needing an a priori hypothesis of where these occur. I used this approach to determine whether the point of transition between northern and southern temperate faunas occurs at Point Conception or elsewhere within California. I also examined expert-vetted latitudinal range data of California fish species from the 1970s and the 2020s to assess how biogeography could change with the backdrop of climate change. The site of turnover was found to occur near Point Conception, in concordance with the traditional view. I suggest that recent species- and population-level processes could be expected to give signals of different events from historical biogeography, possibly explaining the discrepancy across studies. Species richness of California has increased since the 1970s, mostly due to species's ranges expanding northward from Baja California (Mexico). Range shifts under warming conditions seem to be increasing the disparity between northern and southern faunas of California, creating a more divergent biogeography.
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spelling doaj.art-95d831c17d184498a3d1cb78508e98e82023-09-28T05:31:34ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032023-01-01189e029177610.1371/journal.pone.0291776Historical biogeography supports Point Conception as the site of turnover between temperate East Pacific ichthyofaunas.Elizabeth Christina MillerThe cold temperate and subtropical marine faunas of the Northeastern Pacific meet within California as part of one of the few eastern boundary upwelling ecosystems in the world. Traditionally, it is believed that Point Conception is the precise site of turnover between these two faunas due to sharp changes in oceanographic conditions. However, evidence from intraspecific phylogeography and species range terminals do not support this view, finding stronger biogeographic breaks elsewhere along the coast. Here I develop a new application of historical biogeographic approaches to uncover sites of transition between faunas without needing an a priori hypothesis of where these occur. I used this approach to determine whether the point of transition between northern and southern temperate faunas occurs at Point Conception or elsewhere within California. I also examined expert-vetted latitudinal range data of California fish species from the 1970s and the 2020s to assess how biogeography could change with the backdrop of climate change. The site of turnover was found to occur near Point Conception, in concordance with the traditional view. I suggest that recent species- and population-level processes could be expected to give signals of different events from historical biogeography, possibly explaining the discrepancy across studies. Species richness of California has increased since the 1970s, mostly due to species's ranges expanding northward from Baja California (Mexico). Range shifts under warming conditions seem to be increasing the disparity between northern and southern faunas of California, creating a more divergent biogeography.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291776
spellingShingle Elizabeth Christina Miller
Historical biogeography supports Point Conception as the site of turnover between temperate East Pacific ichthyofaunas.
PLoS ONE
title Historical biogeography supports Point Conception as the site of turnover between temperate East Pacific ichthyofaunas.
title_full Historical biogeography supports Point Conception as the site of turnover between temperate East Pacific ichthyofaunas.
title_fullStr Historical biogeography supports Point Conception as the site of turnover between temperate East Pacific ichthyofaunas.
title_full_unstemmed Historical biogeography supports Point Conception as the site of turnover between temperate East Pacific ichthyofaunas.
title_short Historical biogeography supports Point Conception as the site of turnover between temperate East Pacific ichthyofaunas.
title_sort historical biogeography supports point conception as the site of turnover between temperate east pacific ichthyofaunas
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291776
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