Biotic and abiotic drivers of evolution in some Australian thornbills (Passeriformes: Acanthiza) in allopatry, sympatry, and parapatry including a case of character displacement

Date

2020

Authors

Coman, Amelia
Potter, Sally
Moritz, Craig
Campbell, Catriona D.
Joseph, Leo

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing Inc.

Abstract

Disentangling historical, ecological, and abiotic drivers of diversity among closely related species can benefit from morphological diversity being placed in a phylo-genetic context. It can also be aided when the species are variously in allopatry, parapatry, and sympatry. We studied a clade of Australian thornbills (Passeriformes: Acanthizidae: Acanthiza) comprising the Brown Thornbill (A. pusilla), Inland Thornbill (A. apicalis), Mountain Thornbill (A. katherina), and Tasmanian Thornbill (A. ewingii) whose distributions and ecology facilitate this approach. We first clarified phyloge-netic relationships among them and then detected a low level of gene flow in para-patry between a non-sister pair (Brown, Inland). Further work could partition relative roles of past and current hybridization. We identify likely cases of ecologically driven divergent selection and one of convergent evolution. Divergent selection was likely key to divergence of Inland Thornbills from the Brown-Mountain sister pair. In con-trast, convergence in plumage between the non-sister Brown and Inland Thornbills has been driven by their mesic forest habitats on opposite sides of the Australian continent. Finally, morphological distinctiveness of Tasmanian populations of Brown Thornbills could reflect character displacement in sympatry with the ecologically similar Tasmanian Thornbills. Collectively, the combined morphological, genetic, and ecological evidence points to diverse evolutionary processes operating across this closely related group of birds.

Description

Keywords

Acanthiza, character displacement, parapatry, Thornbills

Citation

Source

Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research

Type

Journal article

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License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31