Published October 25, 2022 | Version v1
Figure Open

Figure 5. A in Small islands and large biogeographic barriers have driven contrasting speciation patterns in Indo-Pacific sunbirds (Aves: Nectariniidae)

Description

Figure 5. A, map of the Indo-Pacific with the range of the olive-backed sunbird shaded, as currently recognized by BirdLife International. Sampling sites of the birds included in our 697 bp partial ND2 analysis are marked with different triangles, according to the species they were assigned to by ABGD. Currently recognized subspecies are labelled (Gill et al., 2022). B, mean genetic distance (uncorrected p-distance) between each of the species recognized by ABGD, based on a 697 bp partial ND2 alignment. C, simplified version of a combined maximum likelihood (ML) and Bayesian phylogenetic tree of 697 bp of olive-backed sunbird ND2. In this figure the outgroup is omitted and each of the ABGD species is collapsed into a single branch. Nodes are labelled with Bayesian probability/ ML bootstraps.

Notes

Published as part of Marcaigh, Fionn Ó, Kelly, David J., O'Connell, Darren P., Analuddin, Kangkuso, Karya, Adi, Mccloughan, Jennifer, Tolan, Ellen, Lawless, Naomi, Marples, Nicola M., O, Darren P. & Connell, 2022, Small islands and large biogeographic barriers have driven contrasting speciation patterns in Indo-Pacific sunbirds (Aves: Nectariniidae), pp. 72-92 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 198 (1) on page 12, DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlac081, http://zenodo.org/record/7573837

Files

figure.png

Files (215.0 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:383d2affbf5e5f67824f1dd8a804a851
215.0 kB Preview Download

Linked records

Additional details