Recent research on the evolution of land birds on the Galápagos |
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Authors: | P. R. GRANT |
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Affiliation: | Division of Biological Sciences, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1048, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | A decade of research on the evolution of Galápagos land birds is reviewed, and outstanding questions to be answered are highlighted. Evolutionary studies have been restric 1 almost entirely to the four species of mockingbirds and the 13 species of Darwin's finches. Long-term field studies have been initiated on representatives of both groups. Co-operative breeding has been discovered in the mockingbirds (and hawks). Lack's (1945, 1947) monographic treatment of Darwin's finches has been largely upheld and extended by morphological, ecological, behavioural and biochemical studies. While the phylogenetic origins of Darwin's finches still remain uncertain, the major groupings of the finches have been confirmed by the results of protein polymorphism analysis. Fossils of Darwin's finches have been discovered recently: their potential for illuminating evolutionary change has not yet been realized. Three other major developments are (1) quantitative confirmation of the role of interspecific competition in the adaptive radiation, (2) experimental confirmation of the role of morphological and song cues in species recognition, and experimental evidence of their evolution in the speciation process, and (3) direct study of natural selection on heritable quantitative traits in a population, and identification of its causes. Continuing studies of population variation are likely to reveal the contemporary importance of selection, migration and hybridization, and thereby help us to more fully understand the causes of the adaptive radiation of Darwin's finches. |
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Keywords: | Darwin's finches mockingbirds speciation competition reproductive isolation phylogeny fossils natural selection |
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