Earth history and the passerine superradiation

Carl H. Oliveros(Louisiana State University), Daniel J. Field(University of Cambridge), Daniel T. Ksepka(Bruce Museum), F. Keith Barker(Science Museum of Minnesota), Alexandre Luis Padovan Aleixo(Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi), Michael J. Andersen(University of New Mexico), Per Alström(Uppsala University), Brett W. Benz(American Museum of Natural History), Edward L. Braun(University of Florida), Michael J. Braun(Smithsonian Institution), Gustavo A. Bravo(Harvard University), Robb T. Brumfield(Louisiana State University), R. Terry Chesser(Smithsonian Institution), Santiago Claramunt(University of Toronto), Joël Cracraft(American Museum of Natural History), Andrés M. Cuervo(Universidad Nacional de Colombia), Elizabeth P. Derryberry(University of Tennessee at Knoxville), Travis C. Glenn(University of Georgia), Michael Harvey(University of Tennessee at Knoxville), Peter A. Hosner(Smithsonian Institution), Leo Joseph(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), Rebecca T. Kimball(University of Florida), Andrew L. Mack(Pennsylvania State University), Colin M. Miskelly(Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa), A. Townsend Peterson(University of Kansas), Mark B. Robbins(University of Kansas), Frederick H. Sheldon(Louisiana State University), Luís Fábio Silveira(Universidade de São Paulo), Brian Tilston Smith(American Museum of Natural History), Noor D. White(Smithsonian Institution), Robert G. Moyle(University of Kansas), Brant C. Faircloth(Louisiana State University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
April 1, 2019
Cited by 400Open Access
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Abstract

Avian diversification has been influenced by global climate change, plate tectonic movements, and mass extinction events. However, the impact of these factors on the diversification of the hyperdiverse perching birds (passerines) is unclear because family level relationships are unresolved and the timing of splitting events among lineages is uncertain. We analyzed DNA data from 4,060 nuclear loci and 137 passerine families using concatenation and coalescent approaches to infer a comprehensive phylogenetic hypothesis that clarifies relationships among all passerine families. Then, we calibrated this phylogeny using 13 fossils to examine the effects of different events in Earth history on the timing and rate of passerine diversification. Our analyses reconcile passerine diversification with the fossil and geological records; suggest that passerines originated on the Australian landmass ∼47 Ma; and show that subsequent dispersal and diversification of passerines was affected by a number of climatological and geological events, such as Oligocene glaciation and inundation of the New Zealand landmass. Although passerine diversification rates fluctuated throughout the Cenozoic, we find no link between the rate of passerine diversification and Cenozoic global temperature, and our analyses show that the increases in passerine diversification rate we observe are disconnected from the colonization of new continents. Taken together, these results suggest more complex mechanisms than temperature change or ecological opportunity have controlled macroscale patterns of passerine speciation.


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