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31.
During May and June 2003, a mixed breeding pair consisting of a male western Bonelli’s warbler (Phylloscopus bonelli) and a female wood warbler (P. sibilatrix) successfully raised six young in a broad-leafed forest near Jünkerath, western Germany, an area far outside the regular breeding range of P. bonelli. The identity of the adult birds was confirmed by song, calls, colouration, and wing measurements. Based on blood samples taken from both parents and three juveniles, the potential interbreeding was analysed by molecular methods. Sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene differed between male and female by 8.7% and confirmed the identification of both parents. Sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene revealed that the male was a western Bonelli's and the female a wood warbler. The hybridisation and the parentage of male and female were corroborated by multilocus DNA fingerprinting. This is the first documented and genetically proven hybridisation event between these two warbler species.  相似文献   
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Evolutionary changes in patterns and coloration of plumage are likely to represent a major mechanism for speciation among birds, yet the molecular basis for such changes remains poorly understood. Recently much attention has focused on the melanocortin-1 receptor (MC1R) as a candidate locus for determining the level and extent of epidermal melanin deposition. We tested the hypothesis that MC1R sequence variation is associated with interspecific variation in unmelanized plumage pattern elements in Old World leaf warblers (genus Phylloscopus). This genus is characterized by a variety of plumage patterns that nonetheless vary along similar lines. Species vary in the presence or absence of pale (unmelanized) pattern elements against a dark background, and these patterns are used in species recognition and courtship. We sequenced most of the MC1R coding region for eight Phylloscopus species, representing the full range of plumage patterns found in this genus. Although MC1R sequence varied among species, this variation was not related to melanin-based plumage variation. Rather, evolution of this locus in these birds appears to be conservative. Ratios of nonsynonymous to synonymous substitutions (dN/dS) were consistently low, suggesting that strong purifying selection has operated at this locus, and likelihood ratio testing revealed no evidence of variable selective pressures among lineages or across codons. Adaptive evolution at MC1R may be constrained by the adaptive importance of plumage pattern elements in this genus.  相似文献   
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In bird migration systems, the question of coexistence and competitionof migrants with residents in the nonbreeding season and theirrole in shaping the evolution of present avian communities ismuch debated. However, conclusions are often drawn in a speculativeway. In the Palearctic-African bird migration system, many studieshave addressed the question of coexistence of Palearctic breedingbirds with Afrotropical species in the former's wintering grounds.These studies have led to some generalizations concerning habitatselection and foraging ecology about the traits that might enablemigrants to coexist with residents. Migrants were thereforeassumed to forage in more open habitats, in more peripheralparts of the vegetation and with a higher foraging speed thanresidents. Furthermore, they were also assumed to be more flexiblein foraging behavior by using a wider range of foraging tactics,but some studies revealed contradicting results. We studiedthe ecology of Palearctic migrants in Comoé NationalPark, Ivory Coast, West Africa, during three successive wintersto explore the factors of niche partitioning between migrantsand residents and to test the hypothesis of whether there arecommon behavioral traits in migrants. Therefore, we comparedthe ecology of two Palearctic breeding species: pied flycatcher,Ficedula hypoleuca, and willow warbler, Phylloscopus trochilus,with resident members of the respective guilds. With respectto use of microhabitat, foraging speed, and intake rates, wecould not confirm the above-mentioned generalizations, showingthat care has to be taken into account when drawing conclusionsfrom few studies for a whole migration system on a huge continent.However, both migrating species were more flexible in foragingbehavior than were their Afrotropical counterparts. As thereare hints that this is also the case when migrants are comparedwith residents on their breeding grounds, we suggest that thisflexibility enables migrants to partition resources with residentsand, therefore, coexist with Afrotropical species. We discuss,however, whether this flexibility is an adaptation to migratorybehavior or a prerequisite for the evolution of migration. Therole that competition plays in present communities cannot besolved with a few observational studies because of the followingproblems. First, it is difficult to detect competition in thefield. Second, there are constraints of performing field experimentsthat have not previously been performed in Africa, and third,there are several possible hypothetical scenarios about therole of competition in shaping present communities, includingfactors that might have been important in the past and are thereforeimpossible to detect at present.  相似文献   
35.
Song variation in an avian ring species   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Abstract.— Divergence of mating signals can occur rapidly and be of prime importance in causing reproductive isolation and speciation. A ring species, in which two reproductively isolated taxa are connected by a chain of intergrading populations, provides a rare opportunity to use spatial variation to reconstruct the history of divergence. I use geographic variation in the song of a likely ring species, the greenish warbler ( Phylloscopus trochiloides ) to reconstruct the microevolutionary steps that occurred during divergence of a trait that is often important in speciation in birds. Populations of a western Siberian ( P. t. viridanus ) and an eastern Siberian ( P. t. plumbeitarsus ) form of the greenish warbler meet, but do not interbreed in central Siberia; these forms are connected by a chain of interbreeding populations extending in a ring to the south around the treeless Tibetan Plateau. I show that: (1) song structure differs greatly between the two Siberian forms, which share the same habitat; (2) song structure changes gradually around the ring; (3) singing behavior is relatively simple in the Himalayas, but becomes increasingly complex to the north, both to the west and east of the Tibetan Plateau; and (4) song varies along independent axes of complexity in the western and eastern south-north clines. By comparing geographic variation in singing behavior and ecological variables, I distinguish among possible causes of song divergence, including selection based on the acoustic environment, stochastic effects of sexual selection, and selection for species recognition. I suggest that parallel south-to-north ecological gradients have caused a greater intensity of sexual selection on song in northern populations and that the stochastic effects of sexual selection have led to divergence in song structure.  相似文献   
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Molecular variation is often used to infer the demographic history of species, but sometimes the complexity of species history can make such inference difficult. The willow warbler, Phylloscopus trochilus, shows substantially less geographical variation than the chiffchaff, Phylloscopus collybita, both in morphology and in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) divergence. We therefore predicted that the willow warbler should harbour less nuclear DNA diversity than the chiffchaff. We analysed sequence data obtained from multiple samples of willow warblers and chiffchaffs for the mtDNA cytochrome b gene and four nuclear genes. We confirmed that the mtDNA diversity among willow warblers is low (pi = 0.0021). Sequence data from three nuclear genes (CHD-Z, AFLP-WW1 and MC1R) not linked to the mitochondria demonstrated unexpectedly high nucleotide diversity (pi values of 0.0172, 0.0141 and 0.0038) in the willow warbler, on average higher than the nucleotide diversity for the chiffchaff (pi values of 0.0025, 0.0017 and 0.0139). In willow warblers, Tajima's D analyses showed that the mtDNA diversity, but not the nuclear DNA diversity, has been reduced relative to the neutral expectation of molecular evolution, suggesting the action of a selective sweep affecting the maternally inherited genes. The large nuclear diversity seen within willow warblers is not compatible with processes of neutral evolution occurring in a population with a constant population size, unless the long-term effective population size has been very large (N(e) > 10(6)). We suggest that the contrasting patterns of genetic diversity in the willow warbler may reflect a more complex evolutionary history, possibly including historical demographic fluctuations or historical male-biased introgression of nuclear genes from a differentiated population of Phylloscopus warblers.  相似文献   
37.
Phylogeographic breaks without geographic barriers to gene flow   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Abstract.— The spatial distribution of genetic markers can be useful both in estimating patterns of gene flow and in reconstructing biogeographic history, particularly when gene genealogies can be estimated. Genealogies based on nonrecombining genetic units such as mitochondrial and chloroplast DNA often consist of geographically separated clades that come into contact in narrow regions. Such phylogeographic breaks are usually assumed to be the result of long-term barriers to gene flow. Here I show that deep phylogeographic breaks can form within a continuously distributed species even when there are no barriers to gene flow. The likelihood of observing phylogeographic breaks increases as the average individual dispersal distance and population size decrease. Those molecular markers that are most likely to show evidence of real geographic barriers are also most likely to show phylogeographic breaks that formed without any barrier to gene flow. These results might provide an explanation as to why some species, such as the greenish warblers ( Phylloscopus trochiloides ), have phylogeographic breaks in mitochondrial or chloroplast DNA that do not coincide with sudden changes in other traits.  相似文献   
38.
In the western Pyrenees (Southwest France and Northwest Spain), a narrow hybrid zone exists between the common chiffchaff Phylloscopus (collybita) collybita and the Iberian chiffchaff Phylloscopus (c.) brehmii. In this zone, which is approximately 20 km wide, mixed matings and individuals singing the songs of both taxa occur at substantial frequencies (24 and 8.6%, respectively), suggesting frequent hybridization. Previous studies have shown very weak mitochondrial gene flow (Nm = 0.065), whereas four microsatellites suggested much higher nuclear gene flow (Nm = 4.9). In this study we used the amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) method in order to identify hybrids and early backcrosses. We typed 91 birds from both allopatric and sympatric areas for 12 informative AFLP markers (of > 141 polymorphic fragments), obtained by screening 13 AFLP primer combinations. These individuals were previously typed for song (brehmii, collybita or mixed singers), mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplotype and allelic genotypes at four microsatellite loci. Assignment tests demonstrated that in the zone of sympatry, a substantial number of intermediate genotypes existed among the birds previously believed to be pure collybita and brehmii, based on song and mtDNA haplotype. The majority of the mixed singers had intermediate genotypes. Our data suggest that the fraction of the adult population having a hybrid origin (hybrids or backcrosses) is in the order of 10%. With such a frequency of genetic hybrids, there would have been much more mtDNA introgression than observed, had female hybrids been perfectly fertile/viable. This result is consistent with male-biased gene flow and Haldane's rule.  相似文献   
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The aim of this study was to describe the songbird communities occupying willow and poplar short rotation coppice (SRC) crops during the breeding season, and to identify the features of existing plantations that affect their abundance. Songbird point-counts were undertaken at 66 different plots of SRC at 29 sites throughout Britain and Ireland during spring 1993. Measures of vegetation and coppice management in each plot were also taken. The songbird species using the SRC survey plots were similar to those reported from traditional coppice habitats. Willow SRC contained more resident and migrant songbird species than poplar SRC. Warbler species and buntings in particular were rarely recorded from poplar plots. Finches, tits and thrushes were recorded equally from both willow and poplar. More migrant species were recorded from year 2 willow coppice (i.e. in its third growth season since winter cutting) than in either year 1 or year 3. Most resident species selected older willow or poplar coppice growth up to year 3 or 4, the oldest age classes in the sample. These 4-year trends for migrant and resident songbirds are similar to those observed in traditional coppice woodland over a 10- or 12-year rotation. Skylark and Meadow Pipit were recorded from recently cut SRC plots (year 0). In a regression analysis, the number of songbird species and individuals, particularly migrants, were found to be positively related to the increased structural density or complexity of the coppice vegetation.  相似文献   
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