Minor Isolates and Minor Geographical Barriers in Avian Speciation in Continental Australia
- 1 June 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Emu - Austral Ornithology
- Vol. 87 (2) , 90-102
- https://doi.org/10.1071/mu9870090
Abstract
Summary Ford J. (1987). Minor isolates and minor geographical barriers in avian speciation in continental Australia. Emu 87, 90–102. Ornithologists generally believe that speciation in birds proceeds by geographical splitting of populations into isolates and subsequent divergence. This allopatric mode has been subdivided into the dumbbell or classical mechanism and the peripheral or peripatric mechanism. Speciation theory predicts that peripatric divergence should proceed more rapidly than classical allopatric differentiation. This was examined in the Australian mainland avifauna by comparing the ratios of differentiates to isolates in major and minor geographical refuges on the assumption that populations isolated in minor areas were smaller than those in major ones. An array of distinctive avian species and subspecies was found to have evolved in peripheral refuge areas of mainland Australia. However, minor regions have produced considerably fewer new forms and, moreover, at the same rate. Therefore, the prediction of speciation theory was not confirmed. Differentiates on offshore islands around Australia were also considered and found not to have contributed to species enrichment on the mainland. Birds with patchy distributions were examined and discontinuities in habitat, especially substrate and dependency on specific resources, were the main causes in the semiarid and arid parts of the Australian continent. Another active pathway of adaptation from humid to arid habitat in eastern Bassian elements was revealed: the Grey Range Divide separates some avian populations in the Lake Eyre Basin from parental populations in more coastal regions.This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Genetic Revolutions, Founder Effects, and SpeciationAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1984
- Genetic Revolutions in Relation to Speciation Phenomena: The Founding of New PopulationsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1984
- The role of competition in determining morphological differences between Victorian and Tasmanian passerine birdsAustralian Journal of Zoology, 1977
- Late Quaternary Climates of Australia and New GuineaQuaternary Research, 1976
- Modes of Animal SpeciationAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1975
- The Avifauna of Kangaroo Island and Causes of Its ImpoverishmentEmu - Austral Ornithology, 1974
- Morphological changes in isolated populations of some passerine bird species in AustraliaBiological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1974
- The Relationship of the Helmeted and Yellow-Tufted HoneyeatersEmu - Austral Ornithology, 1973
- Distribution and Taxonomy of Southern Birds in the Great Victoria DesertEmu - Austral Ornithology, 1971
- Distribution of Quail-Thrushes in the Northern Territory, and their Taxonomic RelationsEmu - Austral Ornithology, 1970