Knowledge of avian phylogeny is prerequisite to understanding the circumstances and timing of the diversification of birds and the evolution of morphological, behavioral, and life-history traits. Recent molecular datasets have helped to elucidate the three most basal clades in the tree of living birds, but relationships among neoavian orders (the vast majority of birds) remain frustratingly vexing. Here, we examine intron 7 of the β-fibrinogen gene in the most taxonomically inclusive survey of DNA sequences of nonpasserine bird families and orders to date. These data suggest that Neoaves consist of two sister clades with ecological parallelisms comparable to those found between marsupial and placental mammals. Some members of the putative respective clades have long been recognized as examples of convergent evolution, but it was not appreciated that they might be parts of diverse parallel radiations. In contrast, some traditional orders of birds are suggested by these data to be polyphyletic, with representative families in both radiations.
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1 November 2004
PARALLEL RADIATIONS IN THE PRIMARY CLADES OF BIRDS
Matthew G. Fain,
Peter Houde
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Evolution
Vol. 58 • No. 11
November 2004
Vol. 58 • No. 11
November 2004
convergence
Coronaves
Metaves
Neoaves
parallelism
systematics
β-fibrinogen