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Speciation through temporal segregation of Madeiran storm petrel (Oceanodroma castro) populations in the Azores?

Madeiran storm petrels Oceanodroma castro breed on three small islets in the Azores: Vila, off Santa Maria, and Praia and Baixo, off Graciosa. Analysis of data on brood patch, incubation periods, chick body size and recaptures of adults provides evidence of the existence of two distinct populations...

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Published in:Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences 1998-06, Vol.353 (1371), p.945-953
Main Authors: Monteiro, L. R., Furness, R. W.
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c704t-51c4a4291bd0fc6b7aab76bc4b2c80dde0b4bf8cf9ed5f085cea126eace62e863
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container_title Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences
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description Madeiran storm petrels Oceanodroma castro breed on three small islets in the Azores: Vila, off Santa Maria, and Praia and Baixo, off Graciosa. Analysis of data on brood patch, incubation periods, chick body size and recaptures of adults provides evidence of the existence of two distinct populations (hot- and cool-season) breeding annually on Baixo and Praia, out of phase by four to five months and overlapping in colony attendance during August and early September; on Vila only the cool-season population is present. Analyses of adult morphology indicate highly significant phenotypic differentiation between the sympatric hot- and cool-season breeders, whereas an almost complete phenotypic uniformity characterizes allopatric breeders within the same season. The hot-season birds are 10% smaller in egg and body mass but have longer wings and tails than cool-season birds. The two groups were readily separated by discriminant analysis. The preference to breed in the cooler season is interpreted as a consequence of greater food availability in that period. Morphological differentiation between seasonal populations is interpreted as an adaptative response to different environmental conditions in the two seasons. The hypothesis is given that the hot-season population has evolved from the cool-season population owing to density-dependent constraints on crowded colonies, forcing birds to time-share nest sites. These populations may represent a case of sympatric speciation through temporal partitioning of reproduction and may be better treated as sibling species.
doi_str_mv 10.1098/rstb.1998.0259
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Analysis of data on brood patch, incubation periods, chick body size and recaptures of adults provides evidence of the existence of two distinct populations (hot- and cool-season) breeding annually on Baixo and Praia, out of phase by four to five months and overlapping in colony attendance during August and early September; on Vila only the cool-season population is present. Analyses of adult morphology indicate highly significant phenotypic differentiation between the sympatric hot- and cool-season breeders, whereas an almost complete phenotypic uniformity characterizes allopatric breeders within the same season. The hot-season birds are 10% smaller in egg and body mass but have longer wings and tails than cool-season birds. The two groups were readily separated by discriminant analysis. The preference to breed in the cooler season is interpreted as a consequence of greater food availability in that period. 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source JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; PubMed Central; Royal Society Publishing Jisc Collections Royal Society Journals Read & Publish Transitional Agreement 2025 (reading list)
subjects Animal wings
Aviculture
Azores
Bird banding
Birds
Breeding
Breeding seasons
Eggs
Madeiran Storm Petrel
Nesting sites
Petrels
Sea birds
Sibling Forms
title Speciation through temporal segregation of Madeiran storm petrel (Oceanodroma castro) populations in the Azores?
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