Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15439
Título: Rivers acting as barriers for bird dispersal in the Amazon
Autor: Fernandes, Alexandre Mendes
Cohn-Haft, Mario
Hrbek, Tomas
Farias, Izeni P.
Palavras-chave: Body Mass
Cladistics
Conservation Genetics
Dispersal
Endemic Species
Gene
Gene Flow
Genetic Differentiation
Genetic Structure
Morphology
Passerine
Phylogeography
Population Structure
Primate
River
Understory
Vocalization
Aripuana
Jiparana Basin
Madeira River
Mato Grosso
Aves
Furnariidae
Glyphorynchus Spirurus
Hemitriccus Minor
Herpsilochmus
Hylophylax
Hypocnemis
Passeriformes
Primates
Schiffornis
Thamnophilidae
Data do documento: 2014
Revista: Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia
É parte de: Volume 22, Número 4, Pags. 363-373
Abstract: Morphological, vocal and genetic studies have shown that the Madeira River and its right bank tributaries delimit populations of primates and birds. We sequenced the cytochrome b gene (approx. 950 bp) for individuals of three suboscine passerine bird species, Glyphorynchus spirurus (Furnariidae), Willisornis poecilinotus (Thamnophilidae) and Schiffornis turdina (Tityridae), on opposite banks of the Madeira River and two of its right-bank tributaries, the Aripuanã and Jiparaná rivers. Phylogenetic hypotheses (parsimony, maximum likelihood and Bayesian analysis) revealed clades that have over 3.1% genetic differentiation on opposite banks of the Madeira River for G. spirurus, W. poecilinotus and S. turdina, suggesting that this river restricts gene flow among populations of these three species. The Jiparaná and Aripuanã rivers apparently separate distinct populations of G. spirurus, the smallest species we examined, but not those of the other two heavier bodied species, W. poecilinotus and S. turdina. In G. spirurus four clades with high levels of genetic differentiation (3.2-5.5%) were found to be delimited by the three rivers evaluated, whereas in W. poecilinotus and S. turdina no genetic structure across the Jiparaná and Aripuanã rivers was detected. In general, birds that are known to show population structure across the Madeira tributaries (Glyphorynchus spirurus, Hemitriccus minor, Hypocnemis rondoni, Herpsilochmus stotzi, and Hylophylax naevius) have body masses smaller than those of both Willisornis poecilinotus and Schiffornis turdina, but some exceptions are discussed. Future studies controlling for several variables are necessary to determine the extent to which body mass is a useful predictor of genetic population structure in understory suboscine passerines. © 2015 Sociedade Brasileira de Ornitologia. All rights reserved.
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