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Phylogenetic relationships among Synallaxini spinetails (Aves: Furnariidae) reveal a new biogeographic pattern across the Amazon and ParanĂ¡ river basins
- Source :
- Molecular phylogenetics and evolution. 78
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- Relationships among genera in the tribe Synallaxini have proved difficult to resolve. In this study, I investigate relationships among Synallaxis, Certhiaxis and Schoeniophylax using DNA sequences from the mitochondrion and three nuclear regions. I implemented novel primers and protocols for amplifying and sequencing autosomal and sex-linked introns in Furnariidae that resolved basal relationships in the Synallaxini with strong support. Synallaxis propinqua is sister to Schoeniophylax phryganophilus, and together they form a clade with Certhiaxis. The results are robust to analytical approaches when all genomic regions are analyzed jointly (parsimony, maximum likelihood, and species-tree analysis) and the same basal relationships are recovered by most genomic regions when analyzed separately. A sister relationship between S. propinqua, an Amazonian river island specialist, and S. phryganophilus, from the Parana River basin region, reveals a new biogeographic pattern shared by at least other four pairs of taxa with similar distributions and ecologies. Estimates of divergence times for these five pairs span from the late Miocene to the Pleistocene. Identification of the historical events that produced this pattern is difficult and further advances will require additional studies of the taxa involved and a better understanding of the recent environmental history of South America. A new classification is proposed for the Synallaxini, including the description of a new genus for S. propinqua.
- Subjects :
- biology
Phylogenetic tree
Ecology
Biogeography
Certhiaxis
Sequence Analysis, DNA
South America
biology.organism_classification
Introns
Synallaxis
Synallaxis propinqua
Phylogeography
Taxon
Rivers
Phylogenetics
Genetics
Animals
Passeriformes
Clade
Molecular Biology
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Phylogeny
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10959513
- Volume :
- 78
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Molecular phylogenetics and evolution
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....fbc4ce1c92c0b8e8ba584e03d76bea59