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Global biogeographic patterns of avian morphological diversity

Emma C. Hughes, David P. Edwards, Jen A. Bright, Elliot J. R. Capp, Christopher R. Cooney, Zoë K. Varley, Gavin H. Thomas

2022Ecology Letters47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Understanding the biogeographical patterns, and evolutionary and environmental drivers, underpinning morphological diversity are key for determining its origins and conservation. Using a comprehensive set of continuous morphological traits extracted from museum collections of 8353 bird species, including geometric morphometric beak shape data, we find that avian morphological diversity is unevenly distributed globally, even after controlling for species richness, with exceptionally dense packing of species in hyper-diverse tropical hotspots. At the regional level, these areas also have high morphological variance, with species exhibiting high phenotypic diversity. Evolutionary history likely plays a key role in shaping these patterns, with evolutionarily old species contributing to niche expansion, and young species contributing to niche packing. Taken together, these results imply that the tropics are both 'cradles' and 'museums' of phenotypic diversity.

Topics & Concepts

NicheBiologyEcologySpecies richnessBiodiversityBeakBiogeographyKey (lock)Ecological nicheNiche differentiationDiversity (politics)HabitatAnthropologySociologyEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeMorphological variations and asymmetry
Global biogeographic patterns of avian morphological diversity | Litcius