Enigmatic phylogeny of skuas (Aves: Stercorariidae)

被引:50
作者
Cohen, BL
Baker, AJ
Bleschschmidt, K
Dittmann, DL
Furness, RW
Gerwin, JA
Helbig, AJ
DeKorte, J
Marshall, HD
Palma, RL
Peter, HU
Ramli, R
Siebold, I
Willcox, MS
Wilson, RH
Zink, RM
机构
[1] ROYAL ONTARIO MUSEUM, TORONTO, ON M5S 2C6, CANADA
[2] UNIV JENA, INST ECOL, D-07743 JENA, GERMANY
[3] LOUISIANA STATE UNIV, MUSEUM NAT SCI, BATON ROUGE, LA 70803 USA
[4] UNIV GLASGOW, DIV ECOL & EVOLUTIONARY BIOL, INST BIOMED & LIFE SCI, GLASGOW G12 8QQ, LANARK, SCOTLAND
[5] STATE MUSEUM NAT SCI, RALEIGH, NC 27611 USA
[6] UNIV GRONINGEN, ARCTIC CTR, NL-9700 AS GRONINGEN, NETHERLANDS
[7] MUSEUM NEW ZEALAND, WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND
[8] UNIV MINNESOTA, JF BELL MUSEUM, ST PAUL, MN 55108 USA
[9] UNIV GREIFSWALD, VOGELWARTE HIDDENSEE, D-18565 KLOSTER HIDDENSEE, GERMANY
关键词
D O I
10.1098/rspb.1997.0026
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Multiple sources of evidence show that the skuas (Aves: Stercorariidae) are a monophyletic group, closely related to gulls (Laridae). On morphological and behavioural evidence the Stercorariidae are divided into two widely divergent genera, Catharacta and Stercorarius, consistent with observed levels of nuclear and mitochondrial gene divergence. Catharacta skuas are large-bodied and with one exception breed in the Southern Hemisphere. Stercorarius skuas (otherwise known as jaegers) are smaller bodied and breed exclusively in the Northern Hemisphere. Evidence from both mitochondrial and nuclear genomes and from ectoparasitic lice (Insecta: Phthiraptera) shows that the Pomarine skua, S. pomarinus, which has been recognized as being somewhat intermediate in certain morphological and behavioural characteristics, is much more closely related to species in the genus Catharacta, especially to the Northern Hemisphere-breeding Great skua, C. skua, than it is to the other two Stercorarius skuas, the Arctic skua, S. parasiticus and the Longtailed skua, S. longicaudus. Three possible explanations that might account for this discordant aspect of skua phylogeny are explored. These involve (i) the segregation of ancestral polymorphism, (ii) convergent evolution of morphology and behaviour or (iii) inter-generic hybridization. The available evidence from both nuclear and mitochondrial genomes does not exclude any of these hypotheses. Thus, resolution of this enigma of skua phylogeny awaits further work.
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页码:181 / 190
页数:10
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