Human-Driven Diversity Changes in Caribbean Parrots Across the Holocene

Jessica A. Oswald, Brian Smith, Julie M. Allen, R. Guralnick, D. Steadman, M. LeFebvre
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Abstract

Islands are windows for studying how humans have shaped biogeographic distributions. However, modern diversity patterns on islands are the outcome of evolutionary, ecological, and anthropocentric factors across long-temporal scales that often leave little evidence of the interactions among them. One exception are the parrots of the Caribbean which have a close commensal relationship with humans and an extensive fossil and archaeological record in the Holocene. Using modern and ancient DNA and radiocarbon dating, we present a temporal and spatial overview of the evolution, extirpation, and translocation of Amazona parrots across the Caribbean. Amazona colonized the Greater Antilles in the Pliocene and the most widespread parrot species, the Cuban Parrot, exhibits inter-island divergences throughout the Pleistocene. Within this radiation, we discovered a now extinct, genetically distinct lineage that survived on Turks & Caicos until human settlement of the islands. We also found that the narrowly distributed Hispaniolan Amazon had a range that once included the Bahamas and was introduced by indigenous people to Grand Turk and Montserrat. Our results show that datasets that transcend the extinct-living continuum highlight the long-term role of humans in altering the diversity and distribution of Caribbean biota.
人类驱动的全新世加勒比鹦鹉多样性变化
岛屿是研究人类如何塑造生物地理分布的窗口。然而,岛屿上的现代多样性模式是进化、生态和人类中心因素在长时间尺度上的结果,往往很少留下它们之间相互作用的证据。一个例外是加勒比地区的鹦鹉,它们与人类有着密切的共生关系,在全新世有大量的化石和考古记录。利用现代和古代DNA和放射性碳定年法,我们展示了加勒比海地区亚马逊鹦鹉的进化、灭绝和迁移的时空概况。亚马逊在上新世时占领了大安的列斯群岛,最广泛分布的鹦鹉物种古巴鹦鹉在更新世期间表现出岛屿间的差异。在这种辐射中,我们发现了一种现已灭绝的、基因独特的谱系,它在特克斯和凯科斯群岛上存活下来,直到人类在岛上定居。我们还发现,分布狭窄的伊斯帕尼奥拉亚马逊地区曾经包括巴哈马群岛,并被土著居民引入大特克岛和蒙特塞拉特岛。我们的研究结果表明,超越灭绝-生存连续体的数据集突出了人类在改变加勒比生物群多样性和分布方面的长期作用。
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