Prioritizing species conservation: does the Cape Verde kite exist?

Author:

Johnson Jeff A12,Watson Richard T1,Mindell David P2

Affiliation:

1. The Peregrine Fund5668 West Flying Hawk Lane, Boise, ID 83709, USA

2. Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan Museum of Zoology1109 Geddes Avenue, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA

Abstract

The Cape Verde kite ( Milvus milvus fasciicauda ) is considered to be one of the rarest birds of prey in the world and at significant risk of extinction. For this reason there is great interest in both the taxonomic and the population status of this group. To help resolve its taxonomic status, we provide phylogenetic analyses based on three mitochondrial genes for a sampling of kites in the genus Milvus , including a broad geographical sampling of black kites ( Milvus migrans ), red kites ( Milvus milvus ), Cape Verde kite museum specimens collected between 1897 and 1924, and five kites trapped on the Cape Verde Islands during August 2002. We found that the historical Cape Verde kites, including the type specimen, were non-monophyletic and scattered within a larger red kite clade. The recently trapped kites from the Cape Verde Islands were all phylogenetically diagnosed as black kites. Our findings suggest that the traditional Cape Verde kite is not a distinctive evolutionary unit, and the case for species status, as recently suggested by others, is not supported. We do find support for recognition of at least one clade of yellow-billed kites, traditionally considered as a black kite subspecies, as a distinctive phylogenetic species.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference47 articles.

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3. Bannerman D.A& Bannerman W.M History of the birds of the Cape Verde Islands. 1968 Edinburgh:Oliver & Boyd.

4. Claridge M.F Dawah H.A& Wilson M.R. 1997 London:Chapman & Hall.

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