
Punctuated evolution in the learned songs of African sunbirds
Author(s) -
Jay P. McEntee,
Gleb Zhelezov,
Chacha Werema,
Nadje Najar,
Joshua V. Peñalba,
Elia Mulungu,
Maneno Mbilinyi,
Sylvester Karimi,
Lyubov Chumakova,
J. Gordon Burleigh,
Rauri C. K. Bowie
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
proceedings - royal society. biological sciences/proceedings - royal society. biological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2954
pISSN - 0962-8452
DOI - 10.1098/rspb.2021.2062
Subject(s) - punctuated equilibrium , adaptation (eye) , divergence (linguistics) , selection (genetic algorithm) , rate of evolution , subject (documents) , parallel evolution , evolutionary biology , evolutionary dynamics , adaptive evolution , variation (astronomy) , biology , phylogenetic tree , computer science , population , artificial intelligence , sociology , linguistics , philosophy , biochemistry , demography , physics , neuroscience , library science , gene , astrophysics
Learned traits are thought to be subject to different evolutionary dynamics than other phenotypes, but their evolutionary tempo and mode has received little attention. Learned bird song has been thought to be subject to rapid and constant evolution. However, we know little about the evolutionary modes of learned song divergence over long timescales. Here, we provide evidence that aspects of the territorial songs of Eastern Afromontane sky island sunbirdsCinnyris evolve in a punctuated fashion, with periods of stasis of the order of hundreds of thousands of years or more, broken up by evolutionary pulses. Stasis in learned songs is inconsistent with learned traits being subject to constant or frequent change, as would be expected if selection does not constrain song phenotypes over evolutionary timescales. Learned song may instead follow a process resembling peak shifts on adaptive landscapes. While much research has focused on the potential for rapid evolution in bird song, our results suggest that selection can tightly constrain the evolution of learned songs over long timescales. More broadly, these results demonstrate that some aspects of highly variable, plastic traits can exhibit punctuated evolution, with stasis over long time periods.