GLOBAL PATTERNS OF PLUMAGE COLOUR EVOLUTION IN ISLAND-LIVING PASSERIFORM BIRDS


Journal article


S. Mahoney, M. Oud, Claudie Pageau, Marcio Argollo de Menezes, Nathan Smith, J. Briskie, M. Reudink
bioRxiv, 2021

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APA   Click to copy
Mahoney, S., Oud, M., Pageau, C., de Menezes, M. A., Smith, N., Briskie, J., & Reudink, M. (2021). GLOBAL PATTERNS OF PLUMAGE COLOUR EVOLUTION IN ISLAND-LIVING PASSERIFORM BIRDS. BioRxiv.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Mahoney, S., M. Oud, Claudie Pageau, Marcio Argollo de Menezes, Nathan Smith, J. Briskie, and M. Reudink. “GLOBAL PATTERNS OF PLUMAGE COLOUR EVOLUTION IN ISLAND-LIVING PASSERIFORM BIRDS.” bioRxiv (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Mahoney, S., et al. “GLOBAL PATTERNS OF PLUMAGE COLOUR EVOLUTION IN ISLAND-LIVING PASSERIFORM BIRDS.” BioRxiv, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{s2021a,
  title = {GLOBAL PATTERNS OF PLUMAGE COLOUR EVOLUTION IN ISLAND-LIVING PASSERIFORM BIRDS},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {bioRxiv},
  author = {Mahoney, S. and Oud, M. and Pageau, Claudie and de Menezes, Marcio Argollo and Smith, Nathan and Briskie, J. and Reudink, M.}
}

Abstract

Plumage coloration is an important trait involved communication and is shaped by a variety of ecological pressures. Island residency has the potential to change the evolutionary trajectory of plumage colour by differences in habitat and resources, or by altering predation pressure and social selection intensity. Latitude, island size, and isolation may further influence colour evolution by biasing colonization. Therefore, general patterns of plumage evolution are difficult to disentangle. We used phylogenetically controlled analyses to assess the influence of island residency on plumage colouration, by calculating chromaticity values from red, blue, green scores extracted from photos of Order Passeriformes birds. Importantly, we controlled for ecological factors hypothesized to influence colour evolution and assessed family-level effects. We found 1) colour varied between islands and mainlands in females, but not males, and both sexes were affected by several ecological factors; 2) patterns of colour evolution varied among families; 3) island size and distance to the mainland and other islands significantly influenced colour; and 4) interactions between ecological factors and latitude were consistently influenced colour, supporting a latitudinal gradient hypothesis. Our results indicate although island residency influences female colour evolution, a myriad of ecological factors drive plumage colour and the patterns vary among families.