Published October 17, 2019 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Contrasting drivers of diversification rates on islands and continents across three Passerine families

  • 1. University of Maine

Description

Rates of diversification vary greatly among taxa. Understanding how species-specific traits influence speciation rates will help elucidate mechanisms driving the production and maintenance of biodiversity over broad spatiotemporal scales. Ecological specialization and range size are two characteristics thought to predict differences in speciation rates among clades, yet each mechanism predicts both increases and decreases in speciation. We estimate a continuous index of specialization using avian bill morphology. We determine the relative effect of specialization and range size and shape on speciation rates across 559 species within the Emberizoidea superfamily, a morphologically diverse clade distributed across the Americas and associated islands. We find a significant positive correlation between specialization and speciation rate, and a negative correlation with range size. Only the effect of specialization persisted after removing island endemics, suggesting that ecological specialization is an important driver of diversity across large macroevolutionary scales and the relative importance of specific drivers may differ on islands and continents.

Notes

Files

ALL_TPS_FILES.txt

Files (3.0 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:2514582977b8ae0a1b794f2135fa847d
2.3 MB Preview Download
md5:8b74b5550d0143dc68fe5d581b699340
13.5 kB Download
md5:96482005c5d9486f5ebf2bedfd68d2cf
5.5 kB Download
md5:1c2b0c1527594461f92017e8cdd46046
322.2 kB Preview Download
md5:43689b8bc0f1b3f73b5895ebe9753d47
45.7 kB Preview Download
md5:74f673100002b4063727ee9cdcbe3b64
21.4 kB Download
md5:e7bb97da85cd6add1f6a0420dec95695
286.7 kB Preview Download