Evolution of the preformative molt in Cardinalidae correlates with transitions from forest to open habitats

Author:

Guallar Santi12ORCID,Rueda-Hernández Rafael3ORCID,Pyle Peter4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Biology, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

2. Department de Vertebrats, Museu de Ciències Naturals de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

3. Departamento de Biología Evolutiva, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México DF, México

4. Institute for Bird Populations, Point Reyes Station, California, USA

Abstract

Abstract We explored adaptive factors affecting the preformative molt in the passerine family Cardinalidae, and concluded that the ancestor inhabited forest habitats and underwent a partial preformative molt that included wing coverts but not primaries. Later radiations within the family appeared to be characterized by transitions from forests toward more open habitats, and such transitions also correlated positively with increased preformative molt investment, plumage signaling, and flight. While previous studies had highlighted the role of time and energy constraints in the evolution of the preformative molt in passerines, we conclude that adaptation to the physical environment has had a greater influence than constraints on the evolution of this molt in Cardinalidae. Using molt data from 430 individuals from 41 of the 51 Cardinalidae species, we tested whether social and environmental factors (delayed plumage maturation and habitat openness), as well as that of physiological and time constraints (body mass, migration distance, and breeding latitude), have influenced the evolution of the preformative molt in this family. We predicted that these five factors could relate to the extent of the preformative molt in terms of energy investment, plumage signaling, and flight. We also examined whether or not the presence of an auxiliary preformative molt correlated to the extent of the preformative molt. We found a strong phylogenetic signal for the preformative molt in Cardinalidae due to shared ancestry, with habitat openness correlating significantly with increased molt extent. We also found a very strong relationship with the auxiliary preformative molt, indicating that both episodes form part of the early life molt strategy in this family. Evolutionary histories and the environments to which each taxonomic group has adapted can diverge across passerines, and we expect that future studies will further discover the nature and strength of the evolutionary drivers of preformative molt.

Funder

Dirección General de Asuntos de Personal Académico

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference80 articles.

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2. Birds of the World

3. Dependence of postjuvenile molt on hatching date, condition and sex in the Great Tit;Bojarinova;Journal of Avian Biology,1999

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