Late Holocene range collapse in a former British seabird species

Aim to determine the taxonomic identity of zooarchaeological gadfly petrel (Pterodroma) specimens from northern Europe, in order to investigate whether an unknown, now-extinct Pterodroma species formerly occurred in this region, or whether extant north-east Atlantic gadfly petrel populations now res...

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Published in:Journal of Biogeography
Main Authors: Turvey, S T, Brace, S, Kitchener, Andrew C, Barnes, I, Serjeantson, D
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Blackwell Publishing 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12305
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author Turvey, S T
Brace, S
Kitchener, Andrew C
Barnes, I
Serjeantson, D
author_facet Turvey, S T
Brace, S
Kitchener, Andrew C
Barnes, I
Serjeantson, D
author_sort Turvey, S T
collection National Museums Scotland (NMS) Research Repository
container_issue 8
container_start_page 1583
container_title Journal of Biogeography
container_volume 41
description Aim to determine the taxonomic identity of zooarchaeological gadfly petrel (Pterodroma) specimens from northern Europe, in order to investigate whether an unknown, now-extinct Pterodroma species formerly occurred in this region, or whether extant north-east Atlantic gadfly petrel populations now restricted to the Macaronesian Islands formerly had a much wider Holocene distribution. Location Zooarchaeological Pterodroma material from the Hebrides, Scotland, was compared with modern-day material from the Madeira and Cape Verde archipelagos (Macaronesia) and a global Pterodroma sample. Methods We employed techniques for ancient DNA analysis to amplify mitochondrial cytochrome b sequence data from an Iron Age Scottish Pterodroma specimen. Bayesian phylogenetic analyses were applied to assess the phylogenetic relationship between these ancient sequence data and extant Pterodroma taxa. Results The Scottish Pterodroma sample is phylogenetically distinct from living Macaronesian populations and from all other extant Pterodroma taxa. Although it is phylogenetically placed outside any single Macaronesian taxon, it is most closely related to the P. feae-deserta complex, and the level of sequence divergence between the Scottish Pterodroma and Macaronesian populations is lower than that observed between any two extant global Pterodroma taxa. The extinct north Atlantic gadfly petrels are therefore not distinct at the species level from these surviving populations, and instead form part of the young evolutionary radiation represented today by recently divergent Pterodroma populations on Bugio and Cape Verde, which can all be interpreted as conspecific. Main conclusions Our results suggest that surviving Macaronesian P. feaedeserta populations represent the final remnant of a wider Holocene distribution of this species complex, with the Madeira and Cape Verde archipelagos constituting the final sanctuary of Pterodroma in the north Atlantic following late Holocene extirpation of more northerly colonies possibly associated with ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre North Atlantic
North East Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
North East Atlantic
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institution Open Polar
language unknown
op_collection_id ftnmscotlanddc
op_container_end_page 1589
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12305
op_relation Journal Of Biogeography
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12305
publishDate 2014
publisher Blackwell Publishing
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spelling ftnmscotlanddc:oai:hyku:ce111867-c590-430f-b310-8a4c1adc300e 2025-01-16T23:38:01+00:00 Late Holocene range collapse in a former British seabird species Turvey, S T Brace, S Kitchener, Andrew C Barnes, I Serjeantson, D 2014-08-08 https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12305 unknown Blackwell Publishing Journal Of Biogeography http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12305 extinct Macaronesia zooarchaeology phylogeography Scotland birds gadfly petrel Ancient DNA Pterodroma range collapse Article 2014 ftnmscotlanddc https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12305 2024-08-27T03:10:28Z Aim to determine the taxonomic identity of zooarchaeological gadfly petrel (Pterodroma) specimens from northern Europe, in order to investigate whether an unknown, now-extinct Pterodroma species formerly occurred in this region, or whether extant north-east Atlantic gadfly petrel populations now restricted to the Macaronesian Islands formerly had a much wider Holocene distribution. Location Zooarchaeological Pterodroma material from the Hebrides, Scotland, was compared with modern-day material from the Madeira and Cape Verde archipelagos (Macaronesia) and a global Pterodroma sample. Methods We employed techniques for ancient DNA analysis to amplify mitochondrial cytochrome b sequence data from an Iron Age Scottish Pterodroma specimen. Bayesian phylogenetic analyses were applied to assess the phylogenetic relationship between these ancient sequence data and extant Pterodroma taxa. Results The Scottish Pterodroma sample is phylogenetically distinct from living Macaronesian populations and from all other extant Pterodroma taxa. Although it is phylogenetically placed outside any single Macaronesian taxon, it is most closely related to the P. feae-deserta complex, and the level of sequence divergence between the Scottish Pterodroma and Macaronesian populations is lower than that observed between any two extant global Pterodroma taxa. The extinct north Atlantic gadfly petrels are therefore not distinct at the species level from these surviving populations, and instead form part of the young evolutionary radiation represented today by recently divergent Pterodroma populations on Bugio and Cape Verde, which can all be interpreted as conspecific. Main conclusions Our results suggest that surviving Macaronesian P. feaedeserta populations represent the final remnant of a wider Holocene distribution of this species complex, with the Madeira and Cape Verde archipelagos constituting the final sanctuary of Pterodroma in the north Atlantic following late Holocene extirpation of more northerly colonies possibly associated with ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic North East Atlantic National Museums Scotland (NMS) Research Repository Journal of Biogeography 41 8 1583 1589
spellingShingle extinct
Macaronesia
zooarchaeology
phylogeography
Scotland
birds
gadfly petrel
Ancient DNA
Pterodroma
range collapse
Turvey, S T
Brace, S
Kitchener, Andrew C
Barnes, I
Serjeantson, D
Late Holocene range collapse in a former British seabird species
title Late Holocene range collapse in a former British seabird species
title_full Late Holocene range collapse in a former British seabird species
title_fullStr Late Holocene range collapse in a former British seabird species
title_full_unstemmed Late Holocene range collapse in a former British seabird species
title_short Late Holocene range collapse in a former British seabird species
title_sort late holocene range collapse in a former british seabird species
topic extinct
Macaronesia
zooarchaeology
phylogeography
Scotland
birds
gadfly petrel
Ancient DNA
Pterodroma
range collapse
topic_facet extinct
Macaronesia
zooarchaeology
phylogeography
Scotland
birds
gadfly petrel
Ancient DNA
Pterodroma
range collapse
url https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.12305