Phylogeny of the microcormorants, with the description of a new genus

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Michael Szabo
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Phylogeny of the microcormorants, with the description of a new genus

Postby Michael Szabo » Thu Jun 29, 2023 6:07 pm

Phylogeny of the microcormorants, with the description of a new genus

Martyn Kennedy, Alexander T Salis, Sampath S Seneviratne, Dilini Rathnayake, Lisa J Nupen, Peter G Ryan, Stefano Volponi, Pascale Lubbe, Nicolas J Rawlence, Hamish G Spencer

Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society (27 June 2023).

Abstract: "The aptly named microcormorants (currently placed in the genus Microcarbo) form a morphologically diminutive and distinct clade sister to all other living cormorants and shags. However, the relationships within Microcarbo are largely speculative. Sequence data resolve these relationships unambiguously, with our phylogeny suggesting that the microcormorants separated from the other cormorants ~16 Mya and showing that the two African species [the reed (or long-tailed) cormorant, Microcarbo africanus, and the crowned cormorant, Microcarbo coronatus] are closely related sister taxa, forming a clade that diverged from the other microcormorants ~12 Mya. The deep split between the African microcormorants and the others is considerably older than many well-recognized generic splits within the cormorants (e.g. Leucocarbo and Phalacrocorax). Thus, we suggest that the African microcormorants warrant their own genus, and we erect Afrocarbo, with type species Pelecanus africanus. Within the reduced Microcarbo, we estimate that the little pied cormorant (Microcarbo melanoleucos of Australasia) separated from the sister pair of the Javanese and pygmy cormorants (respectively, Microcarbo niger from south/southeast Asia and Microcarbo pygmaeus from Europe) ~9 Mya and that the latter two species split ~2 Mya. Given the age of these splits, the microcormorants appear to represent another example of morphological conservatism in the Suliformes."

... "Within the microcormorants, the levels of divergence between the different sister-taxon pairs reflect their taxonomic status and geographical proximity, with the Australian and New Zealand subspecies of the little pied cormorant having relatively little variation (7 of 7808 bases, 0.09%), the partially sympatric African species having an intermediate level of variation (17 of 6848 bases, 0.25%) and the Javanese and pygmy cormorants having relatively the most variation (90 of 7935 bases, 1.13%)."

Link to paper: https://academic.oup.com/zoolinnean/adv ... ogin=false
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