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Evolutionary Differentiation in Three Endemic West Indian Warblers

We explored the evolution of geographic distributions in archipelagos by comparing mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences and morphometric characters within and among conspecific populations of Adelaide's Warbler (Dendroica adelaidae), Plumbeous Warbler (D. plumbea), and Olive-capped Warbler (D. p...

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Published in:The Auk 1998-10, Vol.115 (4), p.890-903
Main Authors: Lovette, Irby J., Bermingham, Eldredge, Seutin, Gilles, Ricklefs, Robert E.
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Language:English
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creator Lovette, Irby J.
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description We explored the evolution of geographic distributions in archipelagos by comparing mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences and morphometric characters within and among conspecific populations of Adelaide's Warbler (Dendroica adelaidae), Plumbeous Warbler (D. plumbea), and Olive-capped Warbler (D. pityophila). Phylogenetic reconstructions were based upon 1,455 nucleotides of protein-coding mtDNA sequence from 53 individual warblers; morphological analyses employed three external measurements from a larger number of museum specimens. Of the three taxa studied, Adelaide's Warbler occupied the broadest and most fragmented geographical distribution and exhibited the greatest inter-population differentiation in both mtDNA and morphology. Phylogenetic analyses demonstrated that the three Adelaide's Warbler populations are each reciprocally monophyletic with the Puerto Rican lineage basal to sister clades on Barbuda and St. Lucia. Genetic distances among these populations were comparable with those between some continental species. In contrast to the mtDNA pattern, the Puerto Rican and Barbudan Adelaide's Warbler populations were most similar in morphometry. We observed considerably less mtDNA and morphometric differentiation among populations of the two species with more restricted and less fragmented distributions, the Plumbeous Warbler of Dominica and Guadeloupe and the Olive-capped Warbler of the Bahamas and Cuba. High levels of molecular and morphological differentiation among the geographically disjunct Adelaide's Warbler populations and low differentiation in the two species with less fragmented ranges suggest that range disjunctions indicate the long-term evolutionary independence of geographically isolated island populations.
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Phylogenetic reconstructions were based upon 1,455 nucleotides of protein-coding mtDNA sequence from 53 individual warblers; morphological analyses employed three external measurements from a larger number of museum specimens. Of the three taxa studied, Adelaide's Warbler occupied the broadest and most fragmented geographical distribution and exhibited the greatest inter-population differentiation in both mtDNA and morphology. Phylogenetic analyses demonstrated that the three Adelaide's Warbler populations are each reciprocally monophyletic with the Puerto Rican lineage basal to sister clades on Barbuda and St. Lucia. Genetic distances among these populations were comparable with those between some continental species. In contrast to the mtDNA pattern, the Puerto Rican and Barbudan Adelaide's Warbler populations were most similar in morphometry. We observed considerably less mtDNA and morphometric differentiation among populations of the two species with more restricted and less fragmented distributions, the Plumbeous Warbler of Dominica and Guadeloupe and the Olive-capped Warbler of the Bahamas and Cuba. 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identifier ISSN: 0004-8038
ispartof The Auk, 1998-10, Vol.115 (4), p.890-903
issn 0004-8038
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source JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection
subjects Adenosine triphosphatases
Animals
Archipelagoes
Biological and medical sciences
Birds
Dendroica adelaidae
Dendroica pityophila
Dendroica plumbea
Evolution
Evolutionary genetics
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Genetics of eukaryotes. Biological and molecular evolution
Geographical distribution
Haplotypes
Islands
Mitochondrial DNA
Nucleotides
Ornithology
Phylogenetics
Population genetics
Population genetics, reproduction patterns
Vertebrata
Warblers
title Evolutionary Differentiation in Three Endemic West Indian Warblers
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