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A Phylogeny of the Gulls (Aves: Larinae) Inferred from Osteological and Integumentary Characters
Author(s) -
Chu Philip C.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
cladistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.323
H-Index - 92
eISSN - 1096-0031
pISSN - 0748-3007
DOI - 10.1111/j.1096-0031.1998.tb00202.x
Subject(s) - osteology , integumentary system , biology , zoology , polyphyly , monophyly , clade , evolutionary biology , anatomy , phylogenetics , biochemistry , gene
— Gulls (Aves: Larinae) are among the best‐studied of birds, yet prior attempts to reconstruct gull relationships have met with little success. In the present study I use 117 characters from the skeleton and 64 from the integument to test gull monophyly and estimate gull phylogeny. One shortest tree, requiring 9747 unweighted changes and having a CI of 0.267, was Larus is polyphyletic. Although the tree is fully resolved, support for many of the inferred clades is poor. In a comparison of osteological and integumentary evidence, I found that incongruence between the osteological and integumentary character sets accounts for only a minority of the total incongruence observed, and suggest that low between‐set incongruence may be a consequence of the low signal‐to‐noise ratio in each set of characters. I also found that osteological evidence is particularly important for determining higher‐level structure, whereas integumentary evidence is important for resolving lower‐level relationships within the gull group. Finally, I found that integumentary characters are not dramatically more homoplasious than osteological characters, and argue that casual dismissal of integumentary characters as “too labile” is unwarranted.