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Ecological and morphological determinants of evolutionary diversification in Darwin's finches and their relatives

Ashley M. Reaney, Yanis Bouchenak‐Khelladi, Joseph A. Tobias, Arhat Abzhanov

2020Ecology and Evolution54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Darwin's finches are a classic example of adaptive radiation, a process by which multiple ecologically distinct species rapidly evolve from a single ancestor. Such evolutionary diversification is typically explained by adaptation to new ecological opportunities. However, the ecological diversification of Darwin's finches following their dispersal to Galápagos was not matched on the same archipelago by other lineages of colonizing land birds, which diversified very little in terms of both species number and morphology. To better understand the causes underlying the extraordinary variation in Darwin's finches, we analyze the evolutionary dynamics of speciation and trait diversification in Thraupidae, including Coerebinae (Darwin's finches and relatives) and, their closely related clade, Sporophilinae. For all traits, we observe an early pulse of speciation and morphological diversification followed by prolonged periods of slower steady-state rates of change. The primary exception is the apparent recent increase in diversification rate in Darwin's finches coupled with highly variable beak morphology, a potential key factor explaining this adaptive radiation. Our observations illustrate how the exploitation of ecological opportunity by contrasting means can produce clades with similarly high diversification rate yet strikingly different degrees of ecological and morphological differentiation.

Topics & Concepts

Adaptive radiationBiologyEcologyDiversification (marketing strategy)CladeBiological dispersalEvolutionary biologyArchipelagoAdaptation (eye)Ecological speciationGenetic algorithmBeakEvolutionary ecologyPhylogeneticsGenetic variationPopulationDemographyBusinessGeneNeuroscienceBiochemistrySociologyMarketingHost (biology)Gene flowEvolution and Paleontology StudiesGenetic diversity and population structurePlant and animal studies
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