

School Notes
Date posted: Apr 14, 2019
April 14, 2019
Jeffrey M. DaCosta, Matthew J. Miller, Jennifer L. Mortensen, J. Michael Reed, Robert L. Curry, Michael D. Sorenson
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evoloution
Abstract
The West Indian avifauna has provided fundamental insights into island
biogeography, taxon cycles, and the evolution of avian behavior. Our
interpretations, however, should rely on robust hypotheses of
evolutionary relationships and consistent conclusions about taxonomic
status in groups with many endemic island populations. Here we present a
phylogenetic study of the West Indian thrashers, tremblers, and allies,
an assemblage of at least 5 species found on 29 islands, including what
is considered the Lesser Antilles’ only avian radiation. We improve on
previous phylogenetic studies of this group by using double-digest
restriction site-associated DNA sequencing (ddRAD-seq) to broadly sample
loci scattered across the nuclear genome. A variety of analyses, based
on either nucleotide variation in 2223 loci recovered in all samples or
at 13,282 loci confidently scored as present or absent in all samples,
converged on a single well-supported phylogenetic hypothesis. Results
indicate that the resident West Indian taxa form a monophyletic group,
exclusive of the Neotropical–Nearctic migratory Gray Catbird Dumetella carolinensis,
which breeds in North America; this outcome differs from earlier
studies suggesting that Gray Catbird was nested within a clade of island
resident species. Thus, our findings imply a single colonization of the
West Indies without the need to invoke a subsequent ‘reverse
colonization’ of the mainland by West Indian taxa. Additionally, our
study is the first to sample both endemic subspecies of the endangered
White-breasted Thrasher Ramphocinclus brachyurus. We find that
these subspecies have a long history of evolutionary independence with
no evidence of gene flow, and are as genetically divergent from each
other as other genera in the group. These findings support recognition
of R. brachyurus (restricted to Martinique) and the Saint Lucia Thrasher R. sanctaeluciae
as two distinct, single-island endemic species, and indicate the need
to re-evaluate conservation plans for these taxa. Our results
demonstrate the utility of phylogenomic datasets for generating robust
systematic hypotheses.
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