Authors
LM Caro, PC Caycedo‐Rosales, RCK Bowie, H Slabbekoorn, CD Cadena
Publication date
2013/2/1
Journal
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Volume
26
Issue
2
Pages
357-374
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Local adaptation of populations along elevational gradients is well known, but conclusive evidence that such divergence has resulted in the origin of distinct species in parapatry remains lacking. We integrated morphological, vocal, genetic and behavioural data to test predictions pertaining to the hypothesis of parapatric ecological speciation associated with elevation in populations of a tropical montane songbird, the Grey‐breasted Wood‐wren (Henicorhina leucophrys: Troglodytidae), from the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia. We confirmed that two distinct populations exist along the elevational gradient. Phylogenetic analyses tentatively indicate that the two populations are not sister taxa, suggesting they did not differentiate from a single ancestor along the gradient, but rather resulted from separate colonization events. The populations showed marked divergence in morphometrics, vocalizations …
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Scholar articles
LM Caro, PC Caycedo‐Rosales, RCK Bowie… - Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 2013