info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Molecular and morphological differentiation among Torrent Duck (Merganetta armata) populations in the Andes
Fecha
2019-09Registro en:
Gutiérrez Pinto, Natalia; McCracken, Kevin G.; Tubaro, Pablo Luis; Kopuchian, Cecilia; Astié, Andrea Alejandra; et al.; Molecular and morphological differentiation among Torrent Duck (Merganetta armata) populations in the Andes; Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc; Zoologica Scripta; 48; 5; 9-2019; 589-604
0300-3256
1463-6409
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Gutiérrez Pinto, Natalia
McCracken, Kevin G.
Tubaro, Pablo Luis
Kopuchian, Cecilia
Astié, Andrea Alejandra
Cadena, Carlos Daniel
Resumen
Birds living in riverine environments may show weak population structure because high dispersal abilities required to track habitat dynamics can result in gene flow over broad spatial scales. Alternatively, the configuration of river networks may result in restricted dispersal within river courses or basins, leading to high genetic structure. Although several bird species are riverine specialists in the Andes, no study has extensively evaluated the population genetic structure of any of them. We examined evidence from genetic and morphological data to address questions about the biogeography and taxonomy of the Torrent Duck (Merganetta armata), a riverine specialist bird with a broad distribution in Andean riverine habitats which certainly comprises different subspecies and may comprise more than one species. We found deep subdivisions of Torrent Duck populations from the northern, central and southern portions of the Andes. These lineages, which partly coincide with subspecies described based on plumage variation and body size, do not share mtDNA haplotypes, have private nuclear alleles and exhibit marked differences in morphometric traits. Some geographic barriers presumably restricting gene flow between groups partially coincide with those associated with major genetic breaks in forest species with similar distributions along the Andes, suggesting that bird assemblages including species occupying different habitats were likely affected by common biogeographical events. The three groups of Torrent Ducks may be considered different species under some species definitions and are distinct evolutionary lineages to be conserved and managed separately.