Abstract

AbstractAimWe combine phylogenetic and point locality data from selected lineages of the Atlantic Forest flora and fauna to compare spatial patterns of biodiversity sustained by the current configuration of forest remnants to a scenario of complete forest preservation. We then ask the question "how much biodiversity is likely lost, already"? Specifically, we assess how habitat loss likely impacted the climatic spaces occupied by the local species, the inferred composition of local communities and the spatial distribution of phylogenetic diversity and endemism.LocationAtlantic Forest, Brazil.MethodsUsing carefully curated point localities, phylogenetic data and parameterized models of species distributions, we generate maps of phylogenetic diversity, phylogenetic endemism and phylogenetic turnover for the entire Atlantic Forest. We map patterns of clade‐specific diversity under complete preservation of forest and then incorporate present‐day deforestation patterns to provide a more realistic scenario.ResultsInstead of a singular pattern, three different reoccurring syndromes described the flora and fauna of the Atlantic Forest. These patterns emerged irrespectively of clade age and life history traits. General turnover patterns were highly consistent with previous analyses of species composition and panbiogeographical studies. Deforestation has altered the availability of climatic spaces in the Atlantic Forest, its biological communities and the distribution of evolutionary lineages in space. However, approximately 60% of the pre‐Columbian climatic space persists in forest remnants, and today's biological communities are estimated to be 45% similar to pre‐deforestation times.Main conclusionsThe Atlantic Forest has been reduced to 8% of its once largely continuous range. However, the disproportionately large amounts of climate, community and lineage diversity that persist in remnants provide hope and support for conservation efforts that combine species occurrence and phylogenetic data. Inclusion of evolutionary thinking into strategic approaches to restoring Brazilian ecosystems could further conservation effectiveness by incorporating the adaptive potential of local assemblages in the face of further environmental shifts.

Highlights

  • Understanding how biological diversity is distributed in geographical space and how it shifts in response to environmental change remain two of the most significant challenges facing conservation biologists, ecologists and biogeographers

  • Going beyond species number and species identity, how is phylogenetic diversity, endemism and turnover represented in geographic space (Rosauer et al, 2009)—and how have anthropogenic habitat changes already affected these measures of biodiversity? Mapping phylogenetic diversity sheds light into the key mechanisms driving diversification (Mishler et al, 2014)

  • To ensure that our analysis reflected the most carefully curated locality and phylogenetic information available to date, we focused on two plant clades, one invertebrate clade and three vertebrate clades that have been extensively studied or analysed by the authors

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Understanding how biological diversity is distributed in geographical space and how it shifts in response to environmental change remain two of the most significant challenges facing conservation biologists, ecologists and biogeographers. The addition of phylogenetic information to these biodiversity comparisons is relevant in tropical systems where species descriptions still occur at high rates, and where the current state of taxonomy may not reflect true lineage diversity (Funk, Caminer, & Ron, 2011; Rosauer, Pollock, Linke, & Jetz, 2017) To fill this knowledge gap in the megadiverse yet threatened Atlantic Forest of Brazil, we combine expertise across multiple research groups to provide the first broad comparative snapshot of spatial patterns of phylogenetic diversity of animals and plants of this tropical hotspot, given its present state of fragmentation.

| MATERIAL AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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