Charting the course of reed-warblers across the Pacific islands

被引:40
|
作者
Cibois, Alice [1 ]
Beadell, Jon S. [2 ]
Graves, Gary R. [3 ]
Pasquet, Eric [4 ,5 ]
Slikas, Beth [6 ]
Sonsthagen, Sarah A. [2 ]
Thibault, Jean-Claude [4 ,5 ]
Fleischer, Robert C. [2 ]
机构
[1] Nat Hist Museum Geneva, Dept Mammal & Ornithol, CH-1211 Geneva 6, Switzerland
[2] Smithsonian Inst, Genet Program, Natl Museum Nat Hist, Washington, DC 20008 USA
[3] Smithsonian Inst, Natl Museum Nat Hist, Dept Vertebrate Zool, MRC 116, Washington, DC 20013 USA
[4] Museum Natl Hist Nat, Dept Systemat & Evolut, Origine Struct & Evolut Biodivers UMR7205, Paris, France
[5] Museum Natl Hist Nat, Serv Systemat Mol, CNRS, UMS2700, F-75005 Paris, France
[6] Univ Calif Berkeley, Museum Vertebrate Zool, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
Acrocephalidae; Acrocephalus; back-colonization; colonization patterns; island biogeography; Micronesia; Pacific Ocean islands; phylogeny; Polynesia; reed-warblers; PHYLOGENETIC-RELATIONSHIPS; MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY; MONARCHS POMAREA; FRENCH-POLYNESIA; NATURAL-HISTORY; VOLCANIC-ROCKS; WHITE-EYES; COLONIZATION; ACROCEPHALUS; EVOLUTION;
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2699.2011.02542.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Aim Deciphering the complex colonization history of island archipelagos is greatly facilitated by comprehensive phylogenies. In this study we investigate the phylogeny and biogeography of the insular reed-warblers (genus Acrocephalus) of the tropical Pacific Ocean, from Australia to eastern Polynesia. Location Oceania. Methods We used sequences of mitochondrial DNA (cytochrome b, ND2 and ATP8 genes) to infer the colonization patterns of reed-warblers endemic to Pacific islands and Australia. We sampled all known taxa of Acrocephalus in the Pacific except A. luscinius nijoi, for which no sample was available. Most taxa were represented by toe-pad samples from museum specimens collected in the 19th and 20th centuries. With a few exceptions, several specimens per taxon were sequenced independently in two institutions (Smithsonian Institution and Natural History Museum of Geneva). Results Our data indicate that Pacific reed-warblers do not form a monophyletic group, because A. luscinius luscinius from Guam falls outside the main Pacific radiation. The remaining Pacific taxa are divided into two clades: one clade includes all the reed-warblers from Micronesia (except Guam) and Australia, and two Polynesian taxa from the Line Islands and the southern Marquesas; the other clade includes all remaining Polynesian taxa. The taxa endemic to three archipelagos (Mariana, Marquesas and Society islands) are polyphyletic, suggesting several independent colonizations. Main conclusions Our results provide evidence for a complex pattern of colonization of the Pacific by reed-warblers. Calibration analyses suggest that reed-warbler lineages are much younger than the ages of the islands they occupy. Several remote archipelagos were colonized independently more than once. Consequently, we infer that the colonization of reed-warblers in the Pacific did not follow a regular, stepping-stone-like pattern. The phylogeny also suggests a previously undetected case of reverse colonization (from island to continent) for the Australian lineage and indicates that A. luscinius, as currently defined, is not monophyletic. We discuss the supertramp strategy of reed-warblers in the Pacific and show that, although Pacific reed-warblers meet some of the supertramp criteria in their aptitude for colonizing remote archipelagos, their life history characteristics do not fit the model.
引用
收藏
页码:1963 / 1975
页数:13
相关论文
共 41 条
  • [31] Characterization of Dry Conditions across the US-Affiliated Pacific Islands during Near-Neutral ENSO Phases
    Ludert, Alejandro
    Wang, Bin
    Merrifield, Mark A.
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2018, 31 (16) : 6461 - 6480
  • [32] Performance across extreme environments: comparing waterfall climbing among amphidromous gobioid fishes from Caribbean and Pacific Islands
    Schoenfuss, Heiko L.
    Maie, Takashi
    Kawano, Sandy M.
    Blob, Richard W.
    CYBIUM, 2011, 35 (04): : 361 - 369
  • [33] A multi-locus approach to discern conservation units and adaptive potential of Pacific black ducks across Australia and surrounding islands
    Brown, Joshua I.
    Lavretsky, Philip
    Joseph, Leo
    Roshier, David
    Guay, Patrick-Jean
    Peters, Jeffrey L.
    EMU-AUSTRAL ORNITHOLOGY, 2021, 121 (1-2): : 124 - 135
  • [34] Island hopping across the central Pacific:: mitochondrial DNA detects sequential colonization of the Austral Islands by crab spiders (Araneae: Thomisidae)
    Garb, JE
    Gillespie, RG
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2006, 33 (02) : 201 - 220
  • [35] Using social network analysis to assess communications and develop networking tools among climate change professionals across the Pacific Islands region
    Corlew, Laura Kate
    Keener, Victoria
    Finucane, Melissa
    Brewington, Laura
    Nunn-Crichton, Rachel
    PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTION, 2015, 24 (03) : 133 - 146
  • [36] The role of island physiography and oceanographic factors in shaping species richness and turnover of nesting seabird assemblages on islands across the south-eastern Pacific
    Gusmao, Joao B.
    Luna-Jorquera, Guillermo
    Fernandez, Claudia
    Luna, Nicolas
    Plaza, Paula
    Portflitt-Toro, Matias
    Serratosa, Juan
    Nunez, Pamela
    Varela, Andrea I.
    Rivadeneira, Marcelo M.
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2020, 47 (12) : 2611 - 2621
  • [37] Cryptic variation and recent bipolar range expansion within the Stumped-Toed Gecko Gehyra mutilata across Indian and Pacific Ocean islands
    Rocha, Sara
    Ineich, Ivan
    Harris, D. James
    CONTRIBUTIONS TO ZOOLOGY, 2009, 78 (01) : 1 - 8
  • [38] US Associated Pacific Islands Health Care Teams Chart a Course for Improved Health Systems: Implementation and Evaluation of a Non-communicable Disease Collaborative Model
    Hosey, Gwendolyn M.
    Rengiil, Augusta
    Maddison, Robert
    Agapito, Angelica U.
    Lippwe, Kipier
    Wally, Omengkar Damien
    Agapito, Dennis D.
    Seremai, Johannes
    Primo, Selma
    Luther, X-ner
    Ikerdeu, Edolem
    Satterfield, Dawn
    JOURNAL OF HEALTH CARE FOR THE POOR AND UNDERSERVED, 2016, 27 (04) : 19 - 38
  • [39] Interspecific variation in Rubisco CO2/O2 specificity along the leaf economic spectrum across 23 woody angiosperm plants in the Pacific islands
    Sakata, Tsuyoshi
    Matsuyama, Shin
    Kawai, Kiyosada
    Yasumoto, Ko
    Sekikawa, Seikoh
    Ishida, Atsushi
    NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2024, 243 (03) : 951 - 965
  • [40] Genetic analysis of Black Tiger shrimp (Penaeus monodon) across its natural distribution range reveals more recent colonization of Fiji and other South Pacific islands
    Waqairatu, Salote S.
    Dierens, Leanne
    Cowley, Jeff A.
    Dixon, Tom J.
    Johnson, Karyn N.
    Barnes, Andrew C.
    Li, Yutao
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2012, 2 (08): : 2057 - 2071