Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Older Lineages of Oribatid Mites in Mountain Ranges Have Broader Geographic Ranges and Exhibit More Generalistic Traits

Xue Pan, Bastian Heimburger, Ting‐Wen Chen, Jing‐Zhong Lu, Peter Hans Cordes, Zhijing Xie, Xin Sun, Dong Liu, Donghui Wu, Stefan Scheu, Ina Schaefer, Mark Maraun

Ecology and Evolution · 2025

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Summary

Understanding ecological and evolutionary mechanisms that drive biodiversity patterns is important for comprehending biodiversity. Despite being critically important to the functioning of ecosystems, the mechanisms driving belowground biodiversity are little understood. We investigated the radiation and trait diversity of soil oribatid mites from two mountain ranges, that is, the Alps in Austria and Changbai Mountain in China, at similar latitude in the temperate zone differing in formation processes (orogenesis) and exposed to different climates. We collected and sequenced soil oribatid mites from forests at 950-1700 m at each mountain and embedded them into the chronogram of species from temperate Eurasia. We investigated the phylogenetic age of oribatid mites and compared the node age o

Subject
Other / interdisciplinary
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1002/ece3.71046
Catalogue ID
SNmoqqrwgv-jga00i
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