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Historical biogeography of tits (Aves: Paridae, Remizidae)
Authors:Dieter Thomas Tietze  Udayan Borthakur
Affiliation:1. Department of Ecology and Evolution, The University of Chicago, 1101 East 57th Street, Chicago, IL, 60637, USA
2. Institut f??r ?kologie, Evolution und Diversit?t, Goethe-Universit?t Frankfurt am Main, Max-von-Laue-Stra?e 13, 60439, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
3. Wildlife Genetics Laboratory, Aaranyak, 50, Samanwoy Path, Survey, Beltola, Guwahati, 781028, Assam, India
Abstract:Tits (Aves: Paroidea) are distributed all over the northern hemisphere and tropical Africa, with highest species numbers in China and the Afrotropic. In order to find out if these areas are also the centers of origin, ancestral areas were reconstructed based on a molecular phylogeny. The Bayesian phylogenetic reconstruction was based on sequences for three mitochondrial genes and one nuclear gene. This phylogeny confirmed most of the results of previous studies, but also indicated that the Remizidae are not monophyletic and that, in particular, Cephalopyrus flammiceps is sister to the Paridae. Four approaches, parsimony- and likelihood-based ones, were applied to derive the areas occupied by ancestors of 75?% of the extant species for which sequence data were available. The common ancestor of the Paridae and the Remizidae inhabited tropical Africa and China. The Paridae, as well as most of its (sub)genera, originated in China, but Baeolophus originated in the Nearctic and Cyanistes in the Western Palearctic. Almost all biogeographic reconstruction methods produced similar results, but those which consider the likelihood of the transition from one area to another should be preferred.
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