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Rivers, refuges and population divergence of fire-eye antbirds (Pyriglena) in the Amazon Basin

Journal

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 5, Pages 1090-1107

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.12123

Keywords

Amazon; diversification; neotropics; Pyriglena; refuges; rivers; speciation

Funding

  1. CNPq (The National Research Council of Brazil)
  2. FAPESP (Sao Paulo Research Foundation)
  3. CNPq-Brazil
  4. NSF [OISE-0555482]
  5. Whitney R. Harris World Ecology Center at UMSL
  6. UMSL Department of Biology
  7. AMNH
  8. St. Louis Audubon Society
  9. Sigma Xi
  10. Idea Wild

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The identification of ecological and evolutionary mechanisms that might account for the elevated biotic diversity in tropical forests is a central theme in evolutionary biology. This issue is especially relevant in the Neotropical region, where biological diversity is the highest in the world, but where few studies have been conducted to test factors causing population differentiation and speciation. We used mtDNA sequence data to examine the genetic structure within white-backed fire-eye (Pyriglena leuconota) populations along the Tocantins River valley in the south-eastern Amazon Basin, and we confront the predictions of the river and the Pleistocene refuge hypotheses with patterns of genetic variation observed in these populations. We also investigated whether these patterns reflect the recently detected shift in the course of the Tocantins River. We sampled a total of 32 individuals east of, and 52 individuals west of, the Tocantins River. Coalescent simulations and phylogeographical and population genetics analytical approaches revealed that mtDNA variation observed for fire-eye populations provides little support for the hypothesis that populations were isolated in glacial forest refuges. Instead, our data strongly support a key prediction of the river hypothesis. Our study shows that the Tocantins River has probably been the historical barrier promoting population divergence in fire-eye antbirds. Our results have important implications for a better understanding of the importance of large Amazonian rivers in vertebrate diversification in the Neotropics.

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