“…However, in order to gather a more comprehensive view of climate change responses in the high mountain ecosystems of the northern Andes, other diverse and highly abundant plant genera in the Páramo (Hughes et al, 2013) should be considered under a similar analytical framework as the described here. Immediate candidates to follow up this approach are Bartsia (Uribe-Convers and Tank, 2015), Chusquea (Ely et al, 2019), Diplostephium (Vargas et al, 2017), Hypericum (Nürk et al, 2013), Loricaria (Kolar et al, 2016), Lupinus (Hughes and Eastwood, 2006;Vásquez et al, 2016;Contreras-Ortiz et al, 2018), Oreobolus (Chacón et al, 2006;Gómez-Gutiérrez et al, 2017), Puya (Jabaily and Sytsma, 2013), and Senecio (Duskova et al, 2017;Walter et al, 2020). These combined efforts would ultimately reveal whether the fastest evolving biodiversity hotspot on earth, and in general tropical high mountain ecosystems (Hedberg, 1964;Sklenáø et al, 2014;Chala et al, 2016), have a chance to persist under current environmental and anthropogenic threats.…”