Limits to length asymmetry detection in starlings: implications for biological signalling
- 7 July 1999
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 266 (1426) , 1299-1303
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.1999.0778
Abstract
Dispersal and vicariance are often contrasted as competing processes primarily responsible for spatial and temporal patterns of biotic diversity. Recent methods of biogeographical reconstruction recognize the potential of both processes, and the emerging question is about discovering their relative frequencies. Relatively few empirical studies, especially those employing molecular phylogenies that allow a temporal perspective, have attempted to estimate the relative roles of dispersal and vicariance. In this study, the frequencies of vicariance and dispersal were estimated in six lineages of birds that occur mostly in the aridlands of North America. Phylogenetic trees derived from mitochondrial DNA sequence data were compared for towhees (genus Pipilo), gnatcatchers (genus Polioptila), quail (genus Callipepla), warblers (genus Vermivora) and two groups of thrashers (genus Toxostoma). Different area cladograms were obtained depending on how widespread and missing taxa were coded. Nonetheless, no cladogram was obtained for which all lineages were congruent. Although vicariance was the dominant mode of evolution in these birds, approximately 25% of speciation events could have been derived from dispersal across a pre–existing barrier. An expanded database is now needed to estimate the relative roles of each process. Applying a molecular clock calibration, nearly all speciation events are of the order of a million or more years old, much older than typically presumed.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Visual signalling by asymmetry: a review of perceptual processesPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1999
- Female choice and manipulations of forceps size and symmetry in the earwigForficula auriculariaL.Animal Behaviour, 1998
- Female swordtail fish prefer symmetrical sexual signalAnimal Behaviour, 1998
- Female bluethroats prefer males with symmetric colour bandsAnimal Behaviour, 1997
- Within-individual changes in developmental stability affect flight performanceBehavioral Ecology, 1997
- Evolutionary Ecology and Developmental InstabilityAnnual Review of Entomology, 1995
- Female zebra finches prefer males with symmetric chest plumageProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1994
- Symmetry without fearNature, 1994
- Fluctuating asymmetry and mate choice in paradise whydahs, Vidua paradisaea: an experimental manipulationAnimal Behaviour, 1994
- Fluctuating asymmetry in male sexual ornaments may reliably reveal male qualityAnimal Behaviour, 1990