Published July 21, 2020 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Parallel evolution of bower-building behavior in two groups of bowerbirds suggested by phylogenomics

  • 1. Swedish Museum of Natural History
  • 2. Southern Cross University
  • 3. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
  • 4. Chinese Academy of Sciences

Description

The bowerbirds in New Guinea and Australia include species that build the largest and perhaps most elaborately decorated constructions outside of humans. The males use these courtship bowers, along with their displays, to attract females. In these species, the mating system is polygynous and the females alone incubate and feed the nestlings. The bowerbirds also include 10 species of the socially monogamous catbirds in which the male participates in most aspects of raising the young. How the bower-building behavior evolved has remained poorly understood, as no comprehensive phylogeny exists for the family. It has been assumed that the monogamous catbird clade is sister to all polygynous species. We here test this hypothesis using a newly developed pipeline for obtaining homologous alignments of thousands of exonic and intronic regions from genomic data to build a phylogeny. Our well-supported species tree shows that the polygynous, bower-building species are not monophyletic. The result suggests either that bower-building behavior is an ancestral condition in the family that was secondarily lost in the catbirds, or that it has arisen in parallel in two lineages of bowerbirds. We favor the latter hypothesis based on an ancestral character reconstruction showing that polygyny but not bower-building is ancestral in bowerbirds, and on the observation that Scenopoeetes dentirostris, the sister species to one of the bower-building clades, does not build a proper bower but constructs a court for male display. This species is also sexually monomorphic in plumage despite having a polygynous mating system. We argue that the relatively stable tropical and subtropical forest environment in combination with low predator pressure and rich food access (mostly fruit) facilitated the evolution of these unique life-history traits. 

Notes

This Dryad submission consists of:

1. one file with a description of the content (readme.txt).

2. two tar-zipped files with individual alignments of exonic and intronic loci, respectively, obtained from whole-genome sequencing data of 37 bowerbird taxa and 3 outgroups.

3. two tar-zipped files with individual treefiles obtained by the program IQTREE for 5653 exonic and 7020 intronic loci, respectively.

4. three files with concatenations of the individual treefiles for a) 5653 exonic loci, b) 7020 intronic loci, and c) these exonic and intronic loci combined.

5. three tree files obtained by ASTRAL for a) 5653 exonic loci, b) 7020 intronic loci, and c) these exonic and intronic loci combined.

6. two files with alignments of concatenations of all intronic and exonic loci, respectively.

7. one file with the alignment of 11 mitochondrial coding genes (10,560 bp) for 34 bowerbird taxa and 3 outgroups.

8. one pdf file with more details about material and methods, figures and tables, as well as some text about the systematic relationships observed

9. one file with the time-tree (figure S5) in nexus format

Funding provided by: Vetenskapsrådet
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100004359
Award Number: 621-2017-3693

Files

Ericson_et_al_bowerbirds_supplement_for_Dryad.pdf

Files (501.9 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:90a7c5f1628771223698ca36a58d1e52
128.2 MB Download
md5:1047d3aa9903389155788860fe7052e2
261.4 MB Download
md5:ce572d73800682cca9437146fd18a0f8
1.2 kB Download
md5:7edd034d84be0cf2bc4da5928a1435f0
1.2 kB Download
md5:e5b19792e4ddfab9fabde106757fe122
1.2 kB Download
md5:193da8e4f6f9135aa533c316464fe23d
42.2 kB Download
md5:524398441f35856311a10c50f1415ef7
33.7 MB Download
md5:2e3d3df974a8f2c74902fd62520faef5
19.5 MB Download
md5:a4770f7ef541b9fb69169407be0a95b2
15.9 MB Download
md5:11683413d4abc2ebd61e6479aa06cdbd
7.2 MB Download
md5:e61c3a935ea1def5b260cd353b03d087
8.8 MB Download
md5:11f6c40294b9b66507ec6a1fb9567b91
1.2 MB Preview Download
md5:907b1bb0263ee0609257f83a255cb6f9
11.4 MB Download
md5:6ef1f0f7d64b8a4b98e7362c875052b2
14.2 MB Download
md5:6f5ac130ece2fc6e2b4a4d6f13e727f8
392.0 kB Download
md5:a9183cd41dc75c645c85a14807edbd80
1.5 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1093/sysbio/syaa040 (DOI)