Global variation in the diversification rate of passerine birds.

@article{Ricklefs2006GlobalVI,
  title={Global variation in the diversification rate of passerine birds.},
  author={Robert E. Ricklefs},
  journal={Ecology},
  year={2006},
  volume={87 10},
  pages={
          2468-78
        }
}
Net diversification rates were estimated for samples of primarily tribe-to-family-level clades of passerine birds, taking into account extinction as well as speciation. Two samples were used. The first consisted of 37 clades of primarily temperate North American and primarily tropical South American passerines; the second comprised a global set of 90 clades, each distributed within one or more zoogeographic regions. Circumscription and ages of clades were taken from Sibley and Ahlquist's… 

Figures and Tables from this paper

Evolutionary diversification of clades of squamate reptiles
TLDR
Diversification in squamate lineages was independent of their stem age, but strongly related to the area of the region within which they occur, suggesting negative feedback of species richness on the rate of diversification.
Unparalleled rates of species diversification in Europe
TLDR
It is shown that carnations (Dianthus, Caryophyllaceae), a well-known group of plants from temperate Eurasia, have diversified at the most rapid rate ever reported in plants or terrestrial vertebrates, and suggests Europe, the continent with the world's best-studied flora, has been underestimated as a cradle of recent and rapid speciation.
Clade extinction appears to balance species diversification in sister lineages of Afro-Oriental passerine birds
TLDR
The observed positive exponential relationship between clade size and age suggests that species diversify within clades without apparent limit, and this “pulse” model of diversification is consistent with the fossil record of most groups and reconciles conflicting evidence concerning diversity dependence of clade growth.
Evolutionary and Biogeographic Origins of High Tropical Diversity in Old World Frogs (Ranidae)
TLDR
A strong relationship between the timing of colonization of each region and its current diversity, with recent colonization of temperate regions from tropical regions is found, showing the importance of historical biogeography in explaining high species richness in both the New World and Old World tropics.
DIVERSIFICATION AND BIOGEOGRAPHIC PATTERNS IN FOUR ISLAND RADIATIONS OF PASSERINE BIRDS
TLDR
It is proposed that Paradisaeidae have reached the diversity limit imposed by their restricted distribution, whereas high dispersal and colonization success across the geologically dynamic Indo‐Pacific archipelagos may have sustained high speciation rates for the other three families.
Density-Dependent Cladogenesis in Birds
TLDR
A meta-analysis of the distribution of speciation events through time for 45 clades of birds shows a model of density-dependent speciation in birds, whereby speciation slows as ecological opportunities and geographical space place limits on clade growth.
Rates of ecomorphological trait evolution in passerine bird clades are independent of age
TLDR
It is found no support for a consistent dependence of evolutionary rates on clade age across wing, tail, tarsus and beak shape in the authors' eight clades and it is shown that early burst models of trait evolution are rarely the best-fitting models within these clades.
Diversification rates and the latitudinal gradient of diversity in mammals
TLDR
Testing a set of 232 genera taken from a mammalian supertree and reconstructed dated Bayesian phylogenetic trees found that the average diversification rate was similar among all latitudinal bands, suggesting other factors may be required to explain the latitudinal gradient of diversity in mammals.
ECOLOGICAL LIMITS ON DIVERSIFICATION OF THE HIMALAYAN CORE CORVOIDEA
TLDR
It is suggested the core Corvoidea occupy a restricted volume of ecological space in competition with other bird species, and this has limited in situ diversification and/or immigration.
Extreme genetic structure and dynamic range evolution in a montane passerine bird: implications for tropical diversification
TLDR
This study captured wood-wren lineages in the act of building up diversity via divergence and persistence in allopatry, achievement of secondary sympatry and coexistence at the landscape scale mediated by ecological and evolutionary divergence.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 56 REFERENCES
Global diversification rates of passerine birds
  • R. Ricklefs
  • Environmental Science, Biology
    Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
  • 2003
The distribution of species richness in families of passerine birds suggests that the net rate of diversification was significantly higher than average in as many as 7 out of 47 families. However,
Phylogeny and diversification of the largest avian radiation.
TLDR
The historical framework suggests multiple waves of passerine dispersal from Australasia into Eurasia, Africa, and the New World, commencing as early as the Eocene, essentially reversing the classical scenario of oscine biogeography.
Recent diversification rates in North American tiger beetles estimated from a dated mtDNA phylogenetic tree.
TLDR
A densely sampled phylogenetic tree based on mitochondrial DNA is used to investigate diversification rates in the North American tiger beetles (genus Cicindela), finding evidence for a weak, recent increase in the net diversification rate.
Rates of speciation in the fossil record.
  • J. Sepkoski
  • Environmental Science, Geography
    Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences
  • 1998
TLDR
Pulses of speciation appear sometimes to be associated with climate change, although moderate oscillations of climate do not necessarily promote speciation despite forcing changes in species' geographical ranges.
ABSOLUTE DIVERSIFICATION RATES IN ANGIOSPERM CLADES
TLDR
The phylogenetic distribution of clades with an exceedingly high number of species suggests that traits that confer high rates of diversification evolved independently in different instances and do not characterize the angiosperms as a whole.
The Temporal Course of Quaternary Diversification in the European High Mountain Endemic Primula sect. Auricula (Primulaceae)
TLDR
It is concluded that it is not necessary to invoke an increase in extinction rate but the observed slowdown of interspecific (and intraspecific) diversification in sect.
Post-Eocene climate change, niche conservatism, and the latitudinal diversity gradient of New World birds
TLDR
Differences in the richness gradients of basal vs. derived clades suggest that the hemispherical gradient has been strongly influenced by the differential extirpation of species in older, warm-adapted clades from parts of the world that have become cooler in the present.
Quaternary diversification in European alpine plants: pattern and process.
  • J. Kadereit, E. Griebeler, H. Comes
  • Environmental Science, Biology
    Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences
  • 2004
TLDR
Evidence that, in contrast to Globularia and Soldanella, the branching patterns of the molecular internal transcribed spacer phylogenies of both Primula and Gentiana are incompatible with a constant-rates birth-death model is presented and firm evidence that both diversification and extinction are a function of temperature is found.
Relative risk of extinction of passerine birds on continents and islands
TLDR
This work compiles the ranges of thepasserine (perching) birds of the Americas to produce a map showing where species losses might occur in the long term.
The unified neutral theory of biodiversity: do the numbers add up?
TLDR
Testing the model for passerine birds shows that drift is too slow to account for turnover in regional avifaunas, and Ecological reality can be added to the mix while retaining Hubbell's concept of continuity of communities in space and time.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...