Unidirectionality in the phylogeny of social organization, with special reference to birds

Ecological explanations for the diversity in parental care patterns and social organization in certain taxonomic groups of birds are not fully satisfactory. They need to be supplemented by phylogenetic explanations. In this article I discussed some aspects of the latter type of explanations, especia...

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Main Author: van Rhijn , J.G.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11370/f9b69633-c8b1-484d-a32f-5d8ed7c0084c
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/unidirectionality-in-the-phylogeny-of-social-organization-with-special-reference-to-birds(f9b69633-c8b1-484d-a32f-5d8ed7c0084c).html
https://www.jstor.org/stable/4534893
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spelling ftunigroningenpu:oai:pure.rug.nl:publications/f9b69633-c8b1-484d-a32f-5d8ed7c0084c 2023-05-15T15:18:52+02:00 Unidirectionality in the phylogeny of social organization, with special reference to birds van Rhijn , J.G. 1990-12 http://hdl.handle.net/11370/f9b69633-c8b1-484d-a32f-5d8ed7c0084c https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/unidirectionality-in-the-phylogeny-of-social-organization-with-special-reference-to-birds(f9b69633-c8b1-484d-a32f-5d8ed7c0084c).html https://www.jstor.org/stable/4534893 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess van Rhijn , J G 1990 , ' Unidirectionality in the phylogeny of social organization, with special reference to birds ' , Behaviour , vol. 115 , pp. 153-174 . < https://www.jstor.org/stable/4534893 > ISSN:0005-7959 PARENTAL CARE EVOLUTION CONSTRAINTS article 1990 ftunigroningenpu 2022-01-22T18:29:40Z Ecological explanations for the diversity in parental care patterns and social organization in certain taxonomic groups of birds are not fully satisfactory. They need to be supplemented by phylogenetic explanations. In this article I discussed some aspects of the latter type of explanations, especially the difference between probabilities of certain evolutionary transitions occurring in the one and in the opposite direction. To explain the diversity in parental care and mating patterns in waders and related groups, I presented a model on the phylogenetic pathways in the evolution of parental care and social organization in birds. It departs from an ancestral state with pure male parental care and social organization in birds. It departs from an ancestral state with pure male parental care which may evolve via "uniparental care" (male cares, but female cares if male deserts) and "double clutching" towards biparental care with similar roles, polyandry and pure female parental care (polygyny, promiscuity). I have argued that certain transitions in this model (especially those from uniparental care and double clutching towards biparental care with similar roles and towards pure female parental care) may easily occur in the given direction, but not in the opposite one. The model predicts that pure male parental care and related patterns may be preserved in various lineages and may be associated with several other patterns in related species. It also predicts that pure female parental care is, in many instances, a final stage in the evolution, and hence quite often combined with pure female parental in related species. To investigate the value of the model I tested its predictions for the phylogenetic trees of (1) arctic sandpipers, (2) the complete order of Charadriiformes, and (3) birds in general. All predictions were met. To investigate the likelihood of the model I considered to what extent predictions by alternative models were met. These models either ignored the effect of phylogenetic factors, or departed from alternative ancestral stages. The fit of the data seemed to be bad with the predictions of all of these models. Thus, the original model presented in this article must be considered as a probable reflection of the phylogeny of parental care and social organization in birds. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic University of Groningen research database Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Groningen research database
op_collection_id ftunigroningenpu
language English
topic PARENTAL CARE
EVOLUTION
CONSTRAINTS
spellingShingle PARENTAL CARE
EVOLUTION
CONSTRAINTS
van Rhijn , J.G.
Unidirectionality in the phylogeny of social organization, with special reference to birds
topic_facet PARENTAL CARE
EVOLUTION
CONSTRAINTS
description Ecological explanations for the diversity in parental care patterns and social organization in certain taxonomic groups of birds are not fully satisfactory. They need to be supplemented by phylogenetic explanations. In this article I discussed some aspects of the latter type of explanations, especially the difference between probabilities of certain evolutionary transitions occurring in the one and in the opposite direction. To explain the diversity in parental care and mating patterns in waders and related groups, I presented a model on the phylogenetic pathways in the evolution of parental care and social organization in birds. It departs from an ancestral state with pure male parental care and social organization in birds. It departs from an ancestral state with pure male parental care which may evolve via "uniparental care" (male cares, but female cares if male deserts) and "double clutching" towards biparental care with similar roles, polyandry and pure female parental care (polygyny, promiscuity). I have argued that certain transitions in this model (especially those from uniparental care and double clutching towards biparental care with similar roles and towards pure female parental care) may easily occur in the given direction, but not in the opposite one. The model predicts that pure male parental care and related patterns may be preserved in various lineages and may be associated with several other patterns in related species. It also predicts that pure female parental care is, in many instances, a final stage in the evolution, and hence quite often combined with pure female parental in related species. To investigate the value of the model I tested its predictions for the phylogenetic trees of (1) arctic sandpipers, (2) the complete order of Charadriiformes, and (3) birds in general. All predictions were met. To investigate the likelihood of the model I considered to what extent predictions by alternative models were met. These models either ignored the effect of phylogenetic factors, or departed from alternative ancestral stages. The fit of the data seemed to be bad with the predictions of all of these models. Thus, the original model presented in this article must be considered as a probable reflection of the phylogeny of parental care and social organization in birds.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author van Rhijn , J.G.
author_facet van Rhijn , J.G.
author_sort van Rhijn , J.G.
title Unidirectionality in the phylogeny of social organization, with special reference to birds
title_short Unidirectionality in the phylogeny of social organization, with special reference to birds
title_full Unidirectionality in the phylogeny of social organization, with special reference to birds
title_fullStr Unidirectionality in the phylogeny of social organization, with special reference to birds
title_full_unstemmed Unidirectionality in the phylogeny of social organization, with special reference to birds
title_sort unidirectionality in the phylogeny of social organization, with special reference to birds
publishDate 1990
url http://hdl.handle.net/11370/f9b69633-c8b1-484d-a32f-5d8ed7c0084c
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/unidirectionality-in-the-phylogeny-of-social-organization-with-special-reference-to-birds(f9b69633-c8b1-484d-a32f-5d8ed7c0084c).html
https://www.jstor.org/stable/4534893
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source van Rhijn , J G 1990 , ' Unidirectionality in the phylogeny of social organization, with special reference to birds ' , Behaviour , vol. 115 , pp. 153-174 . < https://www.jstor.org/stable/4534893 >
ISSN:0005-7959
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
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