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27 May 2020 Cryptic Speciation of the Oriental Greenfinch Chloris sinica on Oceanic Islands
Takema Saitoh, Kazuto Kawakami, Yaroslav A. Red'kin, Isao Nishiumi, Chang-Hoe Kim, Alexey P. Kryukov
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Abstract

The Oriental greenfinch, Chloris sinica, is a small seed-eating finch that breeds in the eastern Palearctic region, an area that spans from Russia in the east to China, Korea, and Japan in the south and southwest. Several subspecies have been described based on subtle morphological characteristics, although the taxonomy varies among different authors. Although many ecological studies have been performed, there has been no phylogenetic study that encompasses the species' entire geographical range. We used four regions of mitochondrial DNA to analyze the intraspecies genetic phylogeny and diversity of the Oriental greenfinch. In addition, we performed morphometric analyses using museum specimens. Genetic analysis identified two clades that diverged approximately 1.06 million years ago. These were a population from the Ogasawara Islands, Japan (subspecies kittlitzi, Clade B), and the other populations (Clade A, which could not be subdivided according to geographic context). Morphometric analyses showed that the population on the Kuril Islands (subspecies kawarahiba) had the longest mean wing length, whereas C. s. kittlitzi had the shortest wings. Chloris s. kittlitzi also had the longest mean bill length, probably because it has adapted to feeding on the Ogasawara Islands. Based on molecular phylogeny and morphology analyses, we recommend that C. s. kittlitzi should be treated as a completely distinct species, called the Ogasawara greenfinch, Chloris kittlitzi. It is critically endangered and needs to be specially protected.

© 2020 Zoological Society of Japan
Takema Saitoh, Kazuto Kawakami, Yaroslav A. Red'kin, Isao Nishiumi, Chang-Hoe Kim, and Alexey P. Kryukov "Cryptic Speciation of the Oriental Greenfinch Chloris sinica on Oceanic Islands," Zoological Science 37(3), 280-294, (27 May 2020). https://doi.org/10.2108/zs190111
Received: 6 September 2019; Accepted: 21 February 2020; Published: 27 May 2020
KEYWORDS
cryptic species
cytochrome b
molecular dating
Morphometrics
phylogeny
taxonomy
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