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Phylogeny of the avian genus Pitohui and the evolution of toxicity in birds
Authors:Dumbacher John P  Deiner Kristy  Thompson Lindsey  Fleischer Robert C
Institution:aCenter for Conservation and Evolutionary Genetics, National Zoological Park, and National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20008, USA;bSmithsonian Conservation Research Center, 1500 Remount Road, Front Royal, VA 22630, USA;cCalifornia Academy of Sciences, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, CA 94118, USA
Abstract:Bird species in the avian genus Pitohui contain potent neurotoxic alkaloids that may be used for defense. The genus comprises multiple species that are endemic to New Guinea and were presumed to belong to the family Pachycephalidae or Colluricinclidae, within the core corvoidea, an ancient Australasian radiation of crow-like birds. In order to understand the evolution of toxicity within the genus Pitohui, we sequenced three mitochondrial and two nuclear gene segments and reconstructed a phylogeny of the genus Pitohui and its putative relatives. We show that the genus Pitohui is polyphyletic, and consists of five different lineages. Using Bayesian ancestral state reconstruction, we estimate that toxicity likely evolved multiple times within this group. Furthermore, because the morphological and behavioral similarity among these poisonous birds appears to have evolved convergently, we hypothesize that this may be a possible example of Müllerian mimicry in birds. The Morningbird of Palau, Micronesia, that has often been included in the genus Pitohui, actually belongs in the genus Pachycephala and offers an intriguing case of pronounced evolution on a remote oceanic island.
Keywords:Pitohui  Ifrita  Pachycephalidae  Pachycephala  Phylogeny  Chemical defense  Toxicity  Morningbird  Batrachotoxin
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