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Comparative phylogeography reveals widespread cryptic diversity driven by ecology in Panamanian birds.

Publication ,  Journal Article
McLaughlin, JF; Aguilar, C; Bernstein, JM; Navia-Gine, WG; Cueto-Aparicio, LE; Alarcon, AC; Alarcon, BD; Collier, R; Takyar, A; Vong, SJ ...
Published in: bioRxiv
March 16, 2023

Widespread species often harbor unrecognized genetic diversity, and investigating the factors associated with such cryptic variation can help us better understand the forces driving diversification. Here, we identify potential cryptic species based on a comprehensive dataset of COI mitochondrial DNA barcodes from 2,333 individual Panamanian birds across 429 species, representing 391 (59%) of the 659 resident landbird species of the country, as well as opportunistically sampled waterbirds. We complement this dataset with additional publicly available mitochondrial loci, such as ND2 and cytochrome b, obtained from whole mitochondrial genomes from 20 taxa. Using barcode identification numbers (BINs), we find putative cryptic species in 19% of landbird species, highlighting hidden diversity in the relatively well-described avifauna of Panama. Whereas some of these mitochondrial divergence events corresponded with recognized geographic features that likely isolated populations, such as the Cordillera Central highlands, the majority (74%) of lowland splits were between eastern and western populations. The timing of these splits are not temporally coincident across taxa, suggesting that historical events, such as the formation of the Isthmus of Panama and Pleistocene climatic cycles, were not the primary drivers of cryptic diversification. Rather, we observed that forest species, understory species, insectivores, and strongly territorial species-all traits associated with lower dispersal ability-were all more likely to have multiple BINs in Panama, suggesting strong ecological associations with cryptic divergence. Additionally, hand-wing index, a proxy for dispersal capability, was significantly lower in species with multiple BINs, indicating that dispersal ability plays an important role in generating diversity in Neotropical birds. Together, these results underscore the need for evolutionary studies of tropical bird communities to consider ecological factors along with geographic explanations, and that even in areas with well-known avifauna, avian diversity may be substantially underestimated.

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Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

March 16, 2023

Location

United States
 

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McLaughlin, J. F., Aguilar, C., Bernstein, J. M., Navia-Gine, W. G., Cueto-Aparicio, L. E., Alarcon, A. C., … Miller, M. J. (2023). Comparative phylogeography reveals widespread cryptic diversity driven by ecology in Panamanian birds. BioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.15.530646
McLaughlin, J. F., Celestino Aguilar, Justin M. Bernstein, Wayra G. Navia-Gine, Luis E. Cueto-Aparicio, Ashleigh C. Alarcon, Brandon D. Alarcon, et al. “Comparative phylogeography reveals widespread cryptic diversity driven by ecology in Panamanian birds.BioRxiv, March 16, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.15.530646.
McLaughlin JF, Aguilar C, Bernstein JM, Navia-Gine WG, Cueto-Aparicio LE, Alarcon AC, et al. Comparative phylogeography reveals widespread cryptic diversity driven by ecology in Panamanian birds. bioRxiv. 2023 Mar 16;
McLaughlin, J. F., et al. “Comparative phylogeography reveals widespread cryptic diversity driven by ecology in Panamanian birds.BioRxiv, Mar. 2023. Pubmed, doi:10.1101/2023.03.15.530646.
McLaughlin JF, Aguilar C, Bernstein JM, Navia-Gine WG, Cueto-Aparicio LE, Alarcon AC, Alarcon BD, Collier R, Takyar A, Vong SJ, López-Chong OG, Driver R, Loaiza JR, De León LF, Saltonstall K, Lipshutz SE, Arcila D, Brock KM, Miller MJ. Comparative phylogeography reveals widespread cryptic diversity driven by ecology in Panamanian birds. bioRxiv. 2023 Mar 16;

Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

March 16, 2023

Location

United States