Biogeographical history and taxonomic delimitation in the Australo-Papuan bird-of-paradise Lophorina–Ptiloris species complex is examined with a combination of DNA and morphological markers. The results suggest that the complex started to diverge in the mid-Pliocene, driven by initial isolation and adaptation to altitudinally different habitats. As in many other New Guinean avian taxa, phylogeographic structure is more varied in montane Lophorinathan foothill Ptiloris. With the exception of populations of Lophorina in the eastern New Guinean cordillera, phylogenetic patterns from molecular data and morphological discontinuities are consistently concordant, as are molecular species delimitation tests with previous morphology-based circumscription of taxa in Ptiloris. In Lophorina, however, both molecular data and significant, re-discovered morphological traits identify several taxa as more deeply differentiated than hitherto thought. Accordingly, we use these data in an integrative taxonomic approach to re-delimit taxa in the entire clade, including the recognition of three species in the previously monospecific Lophorina. In Lophorina, the identity of several type specimens is reviewed, one new subspecies is described from the Vogelkop, and the identity of the species name superba Pennant is resolved by neotypification, with correction of its author.
Journal article
Phylogeny, biogeography and taxonomic consequences in a bird-of-paradise species complex, Lophorina–Ptiloris (Aves: Paradisaeidae)
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, Vol.181(2), pp.439-470
2017
Metrics
43 Record Views
UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:
Source: InCites
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Phylogeny, biogeography and taxonomic consequences in a bird-of-paradise species complex, Lophorina–Ptiloris (Aves: Paradisaeidae)
- Creators
- Martin Irestedt - Swedish Museum of Natural HistoryHenrique Batalha-Filho - Federal University of BahiaPer GP Ericson - Swedish Museum of Natural HistoryLeslie Christidis - Southern Cross UniversityRichard Schodde - CSIRO National Research Collections Australia
- Publication Details
- Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, Vol.181(2), pp.439-470
- Identifiers
- 1071; 991012820346502368
- Academic Unit
- Office of the Vice Chancellor
- Resource Type
- Journal article