Literature DB >> 16281034

Single origin of a pan-Pacific bird group and upstream colonization of Australasia.

Christopher E Filardi1, Robert G Moyle.   

Abstract

Oceanic islands have long served as natural laboratories for understanding the diversification of life. In particular, the many thousands of islands spanning the tropical Pacific support an unparalleled array of terrestrial communities whose patterns of diversity contributed fundamental insights to the development of classical speciation and biogeographic theory. Much of this work is founded on an assumption derived from traditional taxonomic approaches, namely that faunas on these widely separated archipelagos stem from a simple one-way, downstream flow of colonists from continents to islands. Here we show, with the use of molecular phylogenetic data from one of the original bird families used to justify this assumption, that a diverse array of endemic island genera and species are the product of a single radiation that diversified across all major Pacific archipelagos in a non-stepping-stone fashion, and recently recolonized continental areas. The geographic scope and lineage-specific approach of this study reveal evolutionary patterns long obscured by traditional taxonomic surveys and indicate that widely dispersed archipelagos can be sources of biological diversity.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16281034     DOI: 10.1038/nature04057

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  32 in total

1.  Diversification and the adaptive radiation of the vangas of Madagascar.

Authors:  S Reddy; A Driskell; D L Rabosky; S J Hackett; T S Schulenberg
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2012-01-04       Impact factor: 5.349

Review 2.  The West Indies as a laboratory of biogeography and evolution.

Authors:  Robert Ricklefs; Eldredge Bermingham
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2008-07-27       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  The other side of the nearly neutral theory, evidence of slightly advantageous back-mutations.

Authors:  Jane Charlesworth; Adam Eyre-Walker
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-10-16       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Out of Hawaii: the origin and biogeography of the genus Scaptomyza (Diptera: Drosophilidae).

Authors:  Patrick O'Grady; Rob Desalle
Journal:  Biol Lett       Date:  2008-04-23       Impact factor: 3.703

5.  New Guinea highland origin of a widespread arthropod supertramp.

Authors:  Michael Balke; Ignacio Ribera; Lars Hendrich; Michael A Miller; Katayo Sagata; Aloysius Posman; Alfried P Vogler; Rudolf Meier
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2009-04-01       Impact factor: 5.349

6.  Major global radiation of corvoid birds originated in the proto-Papuan archipelago.

Authors:  Knud A Jønsson; Pierre-Henri Fabre; Robert E Ricklefs; Jon Fjeldså
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-01-24       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Dispersal has inhibited avian diversification in Australasian archipelagoes.

Authors:  Brian C Weeks; Santiago Claramunt
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2014-09-22       Impact factor: 5.349

8.  Evidence of taxon cycles in an Indo-Pacific passerine bird radiation (Aves: Pachycephala).

Authors:  Knud Andreas Jønsson; Martin Irestedt; Les Christidis; Sonya M Clegg; Ben G Holt; Jon Fjeldså
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2014-01-08       Impact factor: 5.349

9.  An unexpectedly long history of sexual selection in birds-of-paradise.

Authors:  Martin Irestedt; Knud A Jønsson; Jon Fjeldså; Les Christidis; Per G P Ericson
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2009-09-16       Impact factor: 3.260

10.  The geographic scale of diversification on islands: genetic and morphological divergence at a very small spatial scale in the Mascarene grey white-eye (Aves: Zosterops borbonicus).

Authors:  Borja Milá; Ben H Warren; Philipp Heeb; Christophe Thébaud
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2010-05-26       Impact factor: 3.260

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