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  3. 14 LIFE BELOW WATER
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/20784
Title: Rapid loss of flight in the Aldabra white-throated rail
Authors: van de Crommenacker, Janske
Bunbury, Nancy
Jackson, Hazel A.
Nupen, Lisa J.
Wanless, Ross
Fleischer-Dogley, Frauke
Groombridge, Jim J.
Warren, Ben H.
Keywords: DRYOLIMNAS-CUVIERI-ALDABRANUS;PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS;EVOLUTION;FLIGHTLESSNESS;HISTORY;RALLIDAE;ATOLL;DEFORESTATION;CHRONOLOGY
Issue Date: 23-Dec-2019
Publisher: PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Journal Volume: 14
Journal Issue: 12
Source: PLOS ONE
Abstract: 
Flight loss has evolved independently in numerous island bird lineages worldwide, and particularly in rails (Rallidae). The Aldabra white-throated rail (Dryolimnas [cuvieri] aldabranus) is the last surviving flightless bird in the western Indian Ocean, and the only living flightless subspecies within Dryolimnas cuvieri, which is otherwise volant across its extant range. Such a difference in flight capacity among populations of a single species is unusual, and could be due to rapid evolution of flight loss, or greater evolutionary divergence than can readily be detected by traditional taxonomic approaches. Here we used genetic and morphological analyses to investigate evolutionary trajectories of living and extinct Dryolimnas cuvieri subspecies. Our data places D. [c.] aldabranus among the most rapid documented avian flight loss cases (within an estimated maximum of 80,000-130,000 years). However, the unusual intraspecific variability in flight capacity within D. cuvieri is best explained by levels of genetic divergence, which exceed those documented between other volant taxa versus flightless close relatives, all of which have full species status. Our results also support consideration of Dryolimnas [cuvieri] aldabranus as sufficiently evolutionary distinct from D. c. cuvieri to warrant management as an evolutionary significant unit. Trait variability among closely related lineages should be considered when assessing conservation status, particularly for traits known to influence vulnerability to extinction (e.g. flightlessness).
URI: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/20784
ISSN: 1932-6203
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0226064
Appears in Collections:14 LIFE BELOW WATER
15 LIFE ON LAND

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