Building mountain biodiversity: geological and evolutionary processes

Abstract

Mountain regions are unusually biodiverse, with especially rich aggregations of small-30 ranged species that form centers of endemism. Mountains play an array of important roles for Earth's biodiversity, and impact neighboring lowlands through biotic interchange, changes in regional climate, and nutrient run-off. The high biodiversity of certain mountains reflects the interplay of multiple evolutionary mechanisms: enhanced speciation rates with unique opportunities for co-existence and persistence of lineages, shaped by long-term climatic changes 35 interacting with topographically dynamic landscapes. High diversity in most tropical mountains is tightly linked to bedrock geology, notably areas comprising mafic and ultramafic lithologies—rock types rich in magnesium and poor in phosphate that present special requirements for plant physiology. Mountain biodiversity bears the signature of deep-time evolutionary and ecological processes, a history worth preserving in the face of contemporary environmental changes

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