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Title of Journal: Zool J Linn Soc

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Abbravation: Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society

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Narnia

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10.1007/s00289-002-0082-3

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0024-4082

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A phylogenetic reanalysis of allozyme variation am

Authors: STERN DAVID L GRANT PETER R
Publish Date: 1996/10/01
Volume: 118, Issue: 2, Pages: 119-134
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Abstract

DAVID L STERN PETER R GRANT A phylogenetic reanalysis of allozyme variation among populations of Galapagos finches Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society Volume 118 Issue 2 October 1996 Pages 119–134 https//doiorg/101111/j109636421996tb00222xWe reanalysed Yang Patterns allozyme data published in Auk in 1981 of Darwins finches with a variety of distance and cladistic methods to estimate the phylogeny of the group Different methods yielded different results nevertheless there was widespread agreement among the distance methods on several groupings First the two species of Camarhynchus grouped near one another but not always as a monophyletic group Second Cactospiza pallida and Platyspiza crassirostris formed a monophyletic group Finally all the methods including parsimony supported the monophyly of the ground finches The three distance methods also found close relationships generally between each of two populations of Geospiza scandens G difficilis and G conirostris There is evidence for inconstancy of evolutionary rates among species Results from distance methods allowing for rate variation among lineages suggest three conclusions which differ from Yang and Pattons findings First the monophyletic ground finches arose from the paraphyletic tree finches Yang and Patton found that the ground finches and tree finches were sister monophyletic taxa Second Geospiza scandens appears to be a recently derived species and not the most basal ground finch Third G fuliginosa is not a recently derived species of ground finch but was derived from an older split from the remaining ground finches Most of these conclusions should be considered tentative both because the parsimony trees disagreed sharply with the distance trees and because no clades were strongly supported by the results of bootstrapping and statistical tests of alternative hypotheses Absence of strong support for clades was probably due to insufficient data Future phylogenetic studies preferably using DNA sequence data from several unlinked loci should sample several populations of each species and should attempt to assess the importance of hybridization in species phylogeny


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References

citation title=The geography of mitochondrial DNA variation population structure hybridization and species limits in the Fox Sparrow Passerella iliaca citation journal title=Evolution citation year=1994 citation volume=48 citation pages=96111


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