Molecular phylogeny, morphology and life-history comparisons within Circus cyaneus reveal the presence of two distinct evolutionary lineages

Abstract Background Circus cyaneus is a medium-sized bird of prey that is widely distributed across the Northern Hemisphere. There are two currently recognized forms, the Palearctic form C. c. cyaneus (Hen Harrier), and the Nearctic form C. c. hudsonius (Northern Harrier). The forms have recently be...

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Main Authors: Etherington, Graham, Mobley, Jason
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central Ltd. 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.chinesebirdsjournal.com/content/7/1/17
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spelling ftbiomed:oai:biomedcentral.com:s40657-016-0052-3 2023-05-15T15:55:32+02:00 Molecular phylogeny, morphology and life-history comparisons within Circus cyaneus reveal the presence of two distinct evolutionary lineages Etherington, Graham Mobley, Jason 2016-10-21 http://www.chinesebirdsjournal.com/content/7/1/17 en eng BioMed Central Ltd. http://www.chinesebirdsjournal.com/content/7/1/17 Copyright 2016 The Author(s) Circus cyaneus Circus hudsonius Hen Harrier Northern Harrier Phylogenetics Speciation Evolution Research 2016 ftbiomed 2016-11-27T01:02:14Z Abstract Background Circus cyaneus is a medium-sized bird of prey that is widely distributed across the Northern Hemisphere. There are two currently recognized forms, the Palearctic form C. c. cyaneus (Hen Harrier), and the Nearctic form C. c. hudsonius (Northern Harrier). The forms have recently been split by the British Ornithologists’ Union but the American Ornithologists’ Union and some other taxonomic committees have not yet made any change. Here we examine the phylogenetic relationship between the two forms using sequence data from multiple nuclear and mitochondrial genes and examine breeding biology, body size, morphology, dispersal and other behaviors. Methods In order to fully compare cyaneus and hudsonius , we carried out a full literature review, measured museum skins and carried out phylogenetic analysis using a number of different mitochondrial genes and compare our findings to other recent work. Results We find that these two allopatric taxa form reciprocally monophyletic groups, show substantial mtDNA sequence divergence, and further differ significantly with respect to body size, plumage characters, breeding biology, dispersal and other behavioral traits. Conclusions Based on an array of consistently divergent characteristics, it is suggested that the two forms are best regarded as separate species, Hen Harrier ( Circus cyaneus ) and Northern Harrier ( Circus hudsonius ). Other/Unknown Material Circus cyaneus BioMed Central
institution Open Polar
collection BioMed Central
op_collection_id ftbiomed
language English
topic Circus cyaneus
Circus hudsonius
Hen Harrier
Northern Harrier
Phylogenetics
Speciation
Evolution
spellingShingle Circus cyaneus
Circus hudsonius
Hen Harrier
Northern Harrier
Phylogenetics
Speciation
Evolution
Etherington, Graham
Mobley, Jason
Molecular phylogeny, morphology and life-history comparisons within Circus cyaneus reveal the presence of two distinct evolutionary lineages
topic_facet Circus cyaneus
Circus hudsonius
Hen Harrier
Northern Harrier
Phylogenetics
Speciation
Evolution
description Abstract Background Circus cyaneus is a medium-sized bird of prey that is widely distributed across the Northern Hemisphere. There are two currently recognized forms, the Palearctic form C. c. cyaneus (Hen Harrier), and the Nearctic form C. c. hudsonius (Northern Harrier). The forms have recently been split by the British Ornithologists’ Union but the American Ornithologists’ Union and some other taxonomic committees have not yet made any change. Here we examine the phylogenetic relationship between the two forms using sequence data from multiple nuclear and mitochondrial genes and examine breeding biology, body size, morphology, dispersal and other behaviors. Methods In order to fully compare cyaneus and hudsonius , we carried out a full literature review, measured museum skins and carried out phylogenetic analysis using a number of different mitochondrial genes and compare our findings to other recent work. Results We find that these two allopatric taxa form reciprocally monophyletic groups, show substantial mtDNA sequence divergence, and further differ significantly with respect to body size, plumage characters, breeding biology, dispersal and other behavioral traits. Conclusions Based on an array of consistently divergent characteristics, it is suggested that the two forms are best regarded as separate species, Hen Harrier ( Circus cyaneus ) and Northern Harrier ( Circus hudsonius ).
format Other/Unknown Material
author Etherington, Graham
Mobley, Jason
author_facet Etherington, Graham
Mobley, Jason
author_sort Etherington, Graham
title Molecular phylogeny, morphology and life-history comparisons within Circus cyaneus reveal the presence of two distinct evolutionary lineages
title_short Molecular phylogeny, morphology and life-history comparisons within Circus cyaneus reveal the presence of two distinct evolutionary lineages
title_full Molecular phylogeny, morphology and life-history comparisons within Circus cyaneus reveal the presence of two distinct evolutionary lineages
title_fullStr Molecular phylogeny, morphology and life-history comparisons within Circus cyaneus reveal the presence of two distinct evolutionary lineages
title_full_unstemmed Molecular phylogeny, morphology and life-history comparisons within Circus cyaneus reveal the presence of two distinct evolutionary lineages
title_sort molecular phylogeny, morphology and life-history comparisons within circus cyaneus reveal the presence of two distinct evolutionary lineages
publisher BioMed Central Ltd.
publishDate 2016
url http://www.chinesebirdsjournal.com/content/7/1/17
genre Circus cyaneus
genre_facet Circus cyaneus
op_relation http://www.chinesebirdsjournal.com/content/7/1/17
op_rights Copyright 2016 The Author(s)
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