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North or south? Phylogenetic and biogeographic origins of a globally distributed avian clade

journal contribution
posted on 2015-08-01, 00:00 authored by N Dos Remedios, Patricia LeePatricia Lee, T Burke, T Székely, C Küpper
Establishing phylogenetic relationships within a clade can help to infer ancestral origins and indicate how widespread species reached their current biogeographic distributions. The small plovers, genus Charadrius, are cosmopolitan shorebirds, distributed across all continents except Antarctica. Here we present a global, species-level molecular phylogeny of this group based on four nuclear (. ADH5, FIB7, MYO2 and RAG1) and two mitochondrial (. COI and ND3) genes, and use the phylogeny to examine the biogeographic origin of the genus. A Bayesian multispecies coalescent approach identified two major clades (. CRD I and CRD II) within the genus. Clade CRD I contains three species (. Thinornis novaeseelandiae, Thinornis rubricollis and Eudromias morinellus), and CRD II one species (. Anarhynchus frontalis), that were previously placed outside the Charadrius genus. In contrast to earlier work, ancestral area analyses using parsimony and Bayesian methods supported an origin of the Charadrius plovers in the Northern hemisphere. We propose that major radiations in this group were associated with shifts in the range of these ancestral plover species, leading to colonisation of the Southern hemisphere.

History

Journal

Molecular phylogenetics and evolution

Volume

89

Pagination

151 - 159

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1055-7903

eISSN

1095-9513

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Elsevier