Global diversification rates of passerine birds
- 7 November 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 270 (1530) , 2285-2291
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2003.2489
Abstract
The distribution of species richness in families of passerine birds suggests that the net rate of diversification was significantly higher than average in as many as 7 out of 47 families. However, the absence of excess species richness among the 106 tribes within these families indicates that these high rates were transient, perhaps associated in some cases with tectonic movements or dispersal events that extended geographical ranges. Thus, large clade size among passerine birds need not represent intrinsic key innovations that influence the rate of diversification. Approximately 17 families and 30 tribes have too few species relative to other passerine taxa. Many of these are ecologically or geographically marginal, being especially overrepresented in the Australasian region. Observed intervals between lineage splitting suggest that extinction has occurred ca. 90% as frequently as speciation (waiting times of 1.03 and 0.93 Myr) and that the 47 modern families comprising 5712 species descended from approximately 430 passerine lineages extant 24 Myr ago. Speciation and extinction rates among small, marginal families might be 1-2 orders of magnitude lower.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effects of Cenozoic Global Change on Squirrel PhylogenyScience, 2003
- No evidence that sexual selection is an ‘engine of speciation’ in birdsEcology Letters, 2003
- A phylogenetic hypothesis for passerine birds: taxonomic and biogeographic implications of an analysis of nuclear DNA sequence dataProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2002
- Clade-specific morphological diversification and adaptive radiation in Hawaiian songbirdsProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2002
- Nonequilibrium Diversity Dynamics of the Lesser Antillean AvifaunaScience, 2001
- Phylogeny of major lineages of suboscines (Passeriformes) analysed by nuclear DNA sequence dataJournal of Avian Biology, 2001
- Taxon cycles in the Lesser Antillean avifaunaOstrich, 1999
- Key evolutionary innovations and their ecological mechanismsHistorical Biology, 1995
- Testing Whether Certain Traits have Caused Amplified Diversification: An Improved Method Based on a Model of Random Speciation and ExtinctionThe American Naturalist, 1993
- ON SOME MODES OF POPULATION GROWTH LEADING TO R. A. FISHER'S LOGARITHMIC SERIES DISTRIBUTIONBiometrika, 1948