A new antshrike (Aves: Thamnophilidae) endemic to the Caatinga and the role of climate oscillations and drainage shift in shaping cryptic diversity of Neotropical seasonal dry forests

Author:

Cerqueira Pablo123ORCID,Gonçalves Gabriela R.12ORCID,Quaresma Tânia F.34ORCID,Silva Marcelo4ORCID,Pichorim Mauro5ORCID,Aleixo Alexandre34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Programa de Pós‐graduação Em Zoologia Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi/Universidade Federal do Pará Belém Pará Brazil

2. Laboratório de Biogeografia da Conservação e Macroecologia‐BIOMACRO, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas Universidade Federal do Pará, Belém Pará Brazil

3. Instituto Tecnológico Vale Belém Pará Brazil

4. Programa de Pós‐graduação Em Biodiversidade e Evolução Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi Belém Pará Brazil

5. Departamento de Botânica e Zoologia Universidade Federal Do Rio Grande Do Norte Natal Brazil

Abstract

AbstractThe Caatinga is the largest patch of Seasonal Dry Tropical Forest in the Neotropics, located in northeastern Brazil and characterized mainly by deciduous vegetation and extreme rainfall seasonality. It has historically been treated as a biologically impoverished domain, but recent studies uncovered new diversification patterns and several new taxa of frogs, mammals, insects, and fishes. Here we employed a dense sampling regime to evaluate whether the São Francisco River (SFR) would have promoted genetic diversification and fixed phenotypic differences and how Quaternary climatic oscillations shaped distribution and population sizes in a Caatinga endemic species, the Silvery‐cheeked Antshrike (Sakesphoroides cristatus). We adopted an integrative approach using multilocus genetic, plumage, vocal data, and ecological niche modelling (ENM) to characterize evolutionary units and niche suitability in past scenarios. We recovered strong genetic structure across the SFR that was congruent with plumage and vocal variation, revealing a yet undescribed species named herein as Sakesphoroides niedeguidonae, sp. nov. (urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:2B9FC637‐008A‐4E9A‐B92B‐69ED7FE23823s). The splitting time estimated between the newly described species and S. cristatus is consistent with the establishment of the modern course of SFR, with a more recent course shift apparently promoting the secondary contact between the two species in the Raso da Catarina region. After their split, both species experienced increases in population sizes and range sizes at similar times during the Last Glacial Maximum. We expect other Caatinga avian endemic lineages to show similar patterns of genetic differentiation across the SFR that were enhanced by Quaternary climatic oscillations.

Funder

Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

Financiadora de Estudos e Projetos

Publisher

Wiley

Reference105 articles.

1. On the Maximilian types of south American birds in the American Museum of Natural History;Allen J. A.;Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History,1889

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