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Species limits in the Rusty-breasted Antpitta (Grallaricula Ferrugineipectus) complex

Abstract:
The Rusty-breasted Antpitta (Grallaricula f 33 errugineipectus) is widely distributed within the tropical Andes of South America. We analyzed 73 study specimens, 25 vouchered tissue samples and 123 audio recordings to assess geographic genetic, vocal, and morphological variation and evaluate species limits. We found that Grallaricula ferrugineipectus as currently defined is polyphyletic because populations from Colombia and Venezuela form a clade that is closely related to Andean populations of G. nana, whereas populations from Peru and Bolivia are recovered as sister to G. lineifrons. Birds in Colombia and Venezuela (the northern group) last shared a common ancestor with birds from Peru and Bolivia (the southern group) more than 10 million years ago. Northern and southern groups additionally differ in song, suggesting that they may have evolved substantial premating reproductive isolation. Discriminant function analysis reliably distinguished songs from northern and southern groups in multivariate acoustic space, but univariate analyses found non-overlapping acoustic variation between northern and southern groups in only one trait, mean note maximum frequency (and other correlated measures of song pitch). This suggests that the “three-trait” threshold for using vocalizations to inform species limits, which was developed for another suboscine group, the antbirds (Thamnophilidae), may be conservative when applied to antpittas (Grallariidae). In addition, we document apparent clinal variation in song pace within the southern group, a rare example of a suboscine with geographic clinal variation in a vocal trait. Finally, we show that northern and southern groups differ markedly in morphology. In summary, northern and southern groups of Rusty-breasted Antpittas are divergent in genetics, vocalizations and morphology, demonstrating that these taxa are best classified as two monophyletic, biological species with allopatric distributions.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1676/16-126.1

Authors


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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Zoology
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Wilson Ornithological Society
Journal:
Wilson Journal of Ornithology More from this journal
Volume:
130
Issue:
1
Pages:
152-167
Publication date:
2018-04-26
Acceptance date:
2017-06-22
DOI:
ISSN:
1938-5447


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:731384
UUID:
uuid:81818412-9eaf-41b8-aeb2-137321ceaa28
Local pid:
pubs:731384
Source identifiers:
731384
Deposit date:
2017-09-30

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