AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how species traits evolve as birds colonize stable environments, transitioning from ancestral (strategy A) to derived strategies (strategy B) involving different ecological behaviors.
  • Researchers analyzed 53 traits across 81 species of the Fringillidae family to see how they correlate with various evolutionary syndromes like ecological specialization and sexual selection.
  • The findings mostly support the idea that generalist traits (strategy A) are ancestral, but two distinct derived strategies (B1 and B2) emerged in response to environmental predictability: B1 for stable, lowland tropics and B2 for more seasonal, migratory breeding patterns.

Article Abstract

Species traits have been hypothesized by one of us (Ponge, 2013) to evolve in a correlated manner as species colonize stable, undisturbed habitats, shifting from "ancestral" to "derived" strategies. We predicted that generalism, r-selection, sexual monomorphism, and migration/gregariousness are the ancestral states (collectively called strategy A) and evolved correlatively toward specialism, K-selection, sexual dimorphism, and residence/territoriality as habitat stabilized (collectively called B strategy). We analyzed the correlated evolution of four syndromes, summarizing the covariation between 53 traits, respectively, involved in ecological specialization, r-K gradient, sexual selection, and dispersal/social behaviors in 81 species representative of Fringillidae, a bird family with available natural history information and that shows variability for all these traits. The ancestrality of strategy A was supported for three of the four syndromes, the ancestrality of generalism having a weaker support, except for the core group Carduelinae (69 species). It appeared that two different B-strategies evolved from the ancestral state A, both associated with highly predictable environments: one in poorly seasonal environments, called B1, with species living permanently in lowland tropics, with "slow pace of life" and weak sexual dimorphism, and one in highly seasonal environments, called B2, with species breeding out-of-the-tropics, migratory, with a "fast pace of life" and high sexual dimorphism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5723631PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3420DOI Listing

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