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Diversity and clade ages of West Indian hummingbirds and the largest plant clades dependent on them: a 5–9 Myr young mutualistic system
Authors:Stefan Abrahamczyk  Daniel Souto‐Vilarós  Jimmy A McGuire  Susanne S Renner
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Institute for Systematic Botany and Mycology, University of Munich (LMU), Munich, Germany;2. Department of Biology, Nees Institute of Plant Biodiversity, University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany;3. Museum of Vertebrate Zoology and Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
Abstract:We analysed the geographical origins and divergence times of the West Indian hummingbirds, using a large clock‐dated phylogeny that included 14 of the 15 West Indian species and statistical biogeographical reconstruction. We also compiled a list of 101 West Indian plant species with hummingbird‐adapted flowers (90 of them endemic) and dated the most species‐rich genera or tribes, with together 41 hummingbird‐dependent species, namely Cestrum (seven spp.), Charianthus (six spp.), Gesnerieae (75 species, c. 14 of them hummingbird‐pollinated), Passiflora (ten species, one return to bat‐pollination) and Poitea (five spp.), to relate their ages to those of the bird species. Results imply that hummingbirds colonized the West Indies at least five times, from 6.6 Mya onwards, coming from South and Central America, and that there are five pairs of sister species that originated within the region. The oldest of the dated plant groups diversified 9.1, 8.5, and 5.4 Mya, simultaneous with or slightly before the extant West Indian bird radiations. The time frame of the coevolved bird/flower mutualisms obtained here resembles that recently inferred for North America, namely 5–9 Mya. © 2015 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2015, 114 , 848–859.
Keywords:Caribbean  coevolution  endemism  radiations  time trees
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