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Isotopic niches do not follow the expectations of niche conservatism in the bird genus Cinclodes
Authors:Jonathan A. Rader  Daniel R. Matute
Affiliation:1. Dept. of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA;2. Dept. of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA

Contribution: Formal analysis (supporting), Funding acquisition (lead), ​Investigation (equal), Methodology (equal), Project administration (equal), Supervision (lead), Validation (equal), Writing - original draft (supporting), Writing - review & editing (equal)

Abstract:Phenotypic traits are expected to be more similar among closely related species than among species that diverged long ago (all else being equal). This pattern, known as phylogenetic niche conservatism, also applies to traits that are important to determine the niche of species. To test this hypothesis on ecological niches, we analysed isotopic data from 254 museum study skins from 12 of the 16 species of the bird genus Cinclodes and measured stable isotope ratios for four different elements: carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen and oxygen. We find that all traits, measured individually, or as a composite measurement, lack any phylogenetic signal, which in turn suggests a high level of lability in ecological niches. We compared these metrics to the measurements of morphological traits in the same genus and found that isotopic niches are uniquely evolutionarily labile compared to other traits. Our results suggest that, in Cinclodes, the realized niche evolves much faster than expected by the constraints of phylogenetic history and poses the question of whether this is a general pattern across the tree of life
Keywords:Furnariidae  macroevolution  morphospace  phylogenetic analysis  stable isotope analysis  trait evolution
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