The Largest Avian Radiation : the evolution of perching birds, or the order Passeriformes /


edited by Jon Fjeldså, Les Christidis & Per G.P. Ericson.
Bok Engelsk 2020
Medvirkende
Omfang
445 sidor
Opplysninger
SECTION 1. BACKGROUND -- The origin -- What is special about passerine birds? -- The troubled route to an understanding of the relationships among passerine birds -- Research methods used for interpreting passerine evolution -- SECTION 2. CLASSIFICATION AND FAMILIES OF PASSERINE BIRDS -- An updated classification of passerine birds -- The suboscine passerines -- Suborder Passeri: the basal oscine families -- Cohort Corvides: the crow-like passerines -- Infraorder Passerides and the higher songbirds -- Superfamily Paropidea: the tits and their allies -- Superfamily Sylvioidea: the Old World warblers and their allies -- Superfamily Certhioidea: creepers and wrens -- Superfamily Muscicapoidea: mockingbirds, starlings, chats, Old World flycatchers, thrushes, and allies -- Superfamily Passeroidea -- SECTION 3. THEMATIC CHAPTERS -- The worldwide variation in biodiversity: some central questions and concepts -- How new species evolve -- Global variation in species diversity -- How species diversity accumulated over time -- Conservation implications -- Synthesis -- APPENDIX 1. A SHORT EARTH HISTOR: HOW THE EARTH CHANGED DURING THE ERA OF PASSERINE BIRDS -- APPENDIX 2. AN UPDATED CHRONOLOGY OF PASSERINE BIRDS. - This book reveals the remarkable new history of how passerines diversified and dispersed across the entire world. It also presents and explains the new classification, which reflects the phylogenetic history. The new insights reveal that many of the old evolutionary lineages comprise only a few species that remained in their area of origin or underwent limited dispersal. Only a small number of groups underwent significant proliferation of new species and just five (of 145) passerine families are represented on all continents but Antarctica. Even so, the global variation in species richness generally correlates well with the variation in productivity across different environments. We see how a seemingly constant overall rate of evolution of new species is possible because of rapid proliferation in new ecological niches, including archipelagos, and an extraordinary accumulation of endemic species in certain tropical mountain ranges. In addition to describing the revised evolutionary history of passerine birds, the authors try to identify adaptational changes, including shifts in life history strategies, that underlie major evolutionary expansions. Their aim is to further the development of a unified theory to explain how the prodigious variation of Earths biodiversity is generated.
Emner
Dewey
ISBN
841672833X. - 9788416728336

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