Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16604
Título: Diversification history in the Dendrocincla fuliginosa complex (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae): Insights from broad geographic sampling
Autor: Schultz, Eduardo D.
Pérez-Emán, Jorge L.
Aleixo, Alexandre
Miyaki, Cristina Yumi
Brumfield, Robb Thomas
Cracraft, Joel L.
Ribas, Camila Cherem
Palavras-chave: Dna, Mitochondrial
Animals
Bayes Theorem
Biodiversity
Cell Nucleus
Classification
Dna Sequence
Forest
Gene Locus
Genetic Variation
Genetics
Geography
Haplotype
Nucleotide Sequence
Passeriformes
Phylogeny
Phylogeography
Species Difference
Animal
Base Sequence
Bayes Theorem
Biodiversity
Cell Nucleus
Dna, Mitochondrial
Forests
Genetic Loci
Genetic Variation
Geography
Haplotypes
Passeriformes
Phylogeny
Phylogeography
Sequence Analysis, Dna
Species Specificity
Data do documento: 2019
Revista: Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
É parte de: Volume 140
Abstract: Dendrocincla woodcreepers are ant-following birds widespread throughout tropical America. Species in the genus are widely distributed and show little phenotypic variation. Notwithstanding, several subspecies have been described, but the validity of some of these taxa and the boundaries among them have been discussed for decades. Recent genetic evidence based on limited sampling has pointed to the paraphyly of D. fuliginosa, showing that its subspecies constitute a complex that also includes D. anabatina and D. turdina. In this study we sequenced nuclear and mitochondrial markers for over two hundred individuals belonging to the D. fuliginosa complex to recover phylogenetic relationships, describe intraspecific genetic diversity and provide historical biogeographic scenarios of diversification. Our results corroborate the paraphyly of D. fuliginosa, with D. turdina and D. anabatina nested within its recognized subspecies. Recovered genetic lineages roughly match the distributions of described subspecies and congruence among phylogenetic structure, phenotypic diagnosis and distribution limits were used to discuss current systematics and taxonomy within the complex, with special attention to Northern South America. Our data suggest the origin of the complex in western Amazonia, associated with the establishment of upland forests in the area during the early Pliocene. Paleoclimatic cycles and river rearrangements during the Pleistocene could have, at different times, both facilitated dispersal across large Amazonian rivers and the Andes and isolated populations, likely playing an important role in differentiation of extant species. Previously described hybridization in the headwaters of the Tapajós river represents a secondary contact of non-sister lineages that cannot be used to test the role of the river as primary source of diversification. Based on comparisons of D. fuliginosa with closely related understory upland forest taxa, we suggest that differential habitat use could influence diversification processes in a historically changing landscape, and should be considered for proposing general mechanisms of diversification. © 2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2019.106581
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