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New perspectives on the origin and diversification of Africa's forest avifauna

Journal

AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
Volume 46, Issue 3, Pages 235-247

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2028.2008.00992.x

Keywords

Africa; avifauna; speciation; biogeography; evolution; endemism

Categories

Funding

  1. Danish Natural Science Research Council
  2. National Research Foundation (South Africa)
  3. Department of Science and Technology (South Africa)
  4. RCKB

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The use of DNA sequence data in systematic studies has brought about a revolution in our understanding of avian relationships and when combined with digitized distributional data, has facilitated new interpretations about the origins of diverse clades of the African avifauna including its diversification up through the Tertiary until the present. Here we review recent studies with special reference to Africa's forest avifauna and specifically comment on the putative origins of 'hotspots' of endemism in the Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania and in the Cape Region of South Africa. Intriguingly, both these areas appear to have retained populations of relict taxa since the mid-tertiary thermal optimum and at the same time have been centres of recent species differentiation.

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