4.8 Article

Ecological and evolutionary determinants for the adaptive radiation of the Madagascan vangas

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1115835109

关键词

core corvoidea; island endemism; lineage diversification; passeriformes; phylogenetics

资金

  1. Danish National Research Foundation
  2. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research
  3. Swedish Research Council [621-2010-5321]

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Adaptive radiation is the rapid diversification of a single lineage into many species that inhabit a variety of environments or use a variety of resources and differ in traits required to exploit these. Why some lineages undergo adaptive radiation is notwell-understood, but filling unoccupied ecological space appears to be a common feature. We construct a complete, dated, species-level phylogeny of the endemic Vangidae of Madagascar. This passerine bird radiation represents a classic, but poorly known, avian adaptive radiation. Our results reveal an initial rapid increase in evolutionary lineages and diversification in morphospace after colonizing Madagascar in the late Oligocene some 25 Mya. A subsequent key innovation involving unique bill morphology was associated with a second increase in diversification rates about 10Mya. The volume of morphospace occupied by contemporary Madagascan vangas is in many aspects as large (shapevariation)-or even larger (sizevariation)-as that of other better-knownavian adaptive radiations, including the much younger Galapagos Darwin's finches and Hawaiian honeycreepers. Morphological space bears a close relationship to diet, substrate use, and foraging movements, and thus our results demonstrate the great extent of the evolutionary diversification of the Madagascan vangas.

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