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Molecular systematics and historical biogeography of the Black‐browed Barbet species complex ( Megalaima oorti )
Author(s) -
FEINSTEIN JULIE,
YANG XIAOJUN,
LI SHOUHSIEN
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
ibis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.933
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1474-919X
pISSN - 0019-1019
DOI - 10.1111/j.1474-919x.2007.00732.x
Subject(s) - molecular phylogenetics , biology , monophyly , subspecies , biogeography , paraphyly , zoology , phylogeography , systematics , ecology , phylogenetics , clade , taxonomy (biology) , biochemistry , gene
Although Southeast Asia is a global biodiversity hotspot, the tempo and mode of avian diversification there has not been well studied. We investigated the history of the diversification of an endemic Asian tropical bird, the Black‐browed Barbet Megalaima oorti , by reconstructing its intraspecific molecular phylogeny with mitochondrial cytochrome‐ b gene sequences. Our molecular phylogeny suggests that the five subspecies of this montane barbet comprise four deeply divergent clades with strong geographical associations: M. o. oorti in the Malay Peninsula and Sumatra, M. o. annamensis in Vietnam, M. o. nuchalis in Taiwan and M. o. faber / M. o. sini in Hainan and the southeastern Chinese mainland, respectively. Climate changes from the mid‐Pliocene to the Pleistocene may have influenced their diversification through repeated contraction and expansion of Asian tropical forest. Moreover, our data indicate that the Black‐browed Barbet complex is not monophyletic: M. asiatica is embedded in our phylogeny as the sister taxon to M. o. annamensis . The present taxonomic treatment has combined evolutionarily distinct taxa into a single paraphyletic species. Based on our molecular data and previously published plumage characters, we suggest a revision of traditional M. oorti into four monophyletic species: M. oorti , M. nuchalis , M. annamensis and M. faber .

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