4.4 Article

Elevational plumage divergence in the Rufous-capped Babbler (Cyanoderma ruficeps) on a mountainous island

Journal

IBIS
Volume 164, Issue 1, Pages 151-167

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ibi.13009

Keywords

ambient UV light; elevational difference; plumage evolution; spectrometry

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan (MOST) [106-2311-B-001-036-MY3]
  2. Academia Sinica

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Environment plays a key role in the evolution of bird plumage coloration, with mountains exhibiting different ecological conditions that may cause intraspecific plumage divergence. The study on Rufous-capped Babblers in Taiwan shows that birds in montane habitats have higher UV-reflectance and brightness compared to lowland birds, likely due to differences in UV intensity between the habitats. Additionally, there is significant sexual dichromatism in plumage coloration, with females exhibiting brighter or stronger UV-associated coloration than males, suggesting minimal impact of sexual selection on babbler plumage.
Environment plays an important role in the evolution of plumage coloration in birds and may also lead to sexual dichromatism if males and females face different selection pressures. Mountains exhibit varying ecological conditions along their elevation gradient that may impose divergent selection on elevationally widespread species, causing intraspecific plumage divergence. For example, UV light environments often vary between montane and lowland habitats, which could potentially cause differences in plumage UV reflection between birds occurring in the two types of habitats. However, few studies have examined the effects of elevation on plumage evolution. In this study, we quantified the plumage coloration of the Rufous-capped Babbler Cyanoderma ruficeps from montane and lowland habitats on a mountainous island, Taiwan. We aimed to examine whether their plumage showed differences associated with changing ecological environments across the elevational gradient. The results supported that the plumage of babblers occupying montane habitats had higher UV-reflectance and brightness than that of lowland birds, corresponding to the higher UV intensity in montane than lowland background light environments. The elevational differences were mainly found across the ventral parts of babblers that had relatively higher levels of UV reflectance compared with their dorsal parts. Alternatively, the brighter plumage, with higher UV-reflectance in montane than lowland birds, might be mediated by physiological adaptation to other ecological factors, such as parasite pressures. The elevational differences in plumage UV-reflectance and brightness were more dramatic in males than in females. However, we found significant sexual dichromatism in different body parts between montane and lowland babblers in which females had brighter or stronger UV-associated coloration than males, suggesting that sexual selection has little impact on babbler plumage. Our study suggests the importance of elevational divergent selection associated with UV light or other ecological environments on avian plumage evolution.

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