Taxonomy, phylogeny and biogeography of African spurfowls (Galliformes, Phasianidae, Coturnicinae, Pternistis spp.)

Author:

Mandiwana-Neudani Tshifhiwa G.,Little Robin M.ORCID,Crowe Timothy M.ORCID,Bowie Rauri C.K.

Abstract

AbstractDuring much of the 20th Century, partridge/quail-like, Afro-Asian phasianine birds referred to commonly as African spurfowls, francolins and/or partridges had a tortuous taxonomic history. Because of striking autapomorphic differences in plumage, vocalizations and ecology in some of these taxa, as many as nine genera and nearly 200 clinal and/or idiosyncratic subspecies, embedded within a polyphyletic Perdicinae, were recognized. In 1963, two clades, 28 ‘francolin’ and ‘spurfowl’ species (fisante in Afrikaans) and 13 Afro-Asiatic ‘francolins’ and ‘partridges’ (patryse in Afrikaans), were combined into a single genus (Francolinus) – the largest within the Galliformes – comprising about 100 subspecies. Furthermore, fisante and patryse were partitioned into several unnamed “Groups” and four “Unplaced” species. Here, we use morphological, behavioural and DNA evidence to produce: a comprehensive revision of the taxonomy and phylogeny of the fisante clade; a stable classification system for tis component taxa; and hypotheses vis-à-vis eco-biogeographical processes that promoted their speciation and cladogenesis. We shift Francolinus spp. sensu stricto (members of the Spotted Group) and the Unplaced ‘Francolinus’ gularis from the fisante clade to the patryse [discussed in Mandiwana-Neudani et al., in review]. An Unplaced fisant, ‘F.’ nahani, is linked with Ptilopachus petrosus (another African endemic ‘partridge‘) within the Odontophoridae (New World ‘Quails‘). We recognize 25 species of fisante (hereafter spurfowls), including seven with subspecies. They comprise 34 terminal taxa placed within a single genus, Pternistis, sister to Ammoperdix and Perdicula spp., Coturnix ‘quails’ and Alectoris ‘partridges‘, within the now monophyletic Coturnicinae. Only one of four putative Groups of spurfowls, the Bare-throated Group, is monophyletic. The other three Groups (Montane, Scaly and Vermiculated) are para- or polyphyletic. Several species pairs of spurfowls, most notably P. afer and cranchii, hybridize in para/sympatry. One Bare-throated spurfowl, P. rufopictus, may be the product of stabilized hybridization between P. afer and/or cranchii and P. leucoscepus.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference66 articles.

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