Abstract

Species traits have been hypothesized by one of us (Ponge, 2013) to evolve in a correlated manner as species colonize stable, undisturbed habitats, shifting from “ancestral” to “derived” strategies. We predicted that generalism, r‐selection, sexual monomorphism, and migration/gregariousness are the ancestral states (collectively called strategy A) and evolved correlatively toward specialism, K‐selection, sexual dimorphism, and residence/territoriality as habitat stabilized (collectively called B strategy). We analyzed the correlated evolution of four syndromes, summarizing the covariation between 53 traits, respectively, involved in ecological specialization, r‐K gradient, sexual selection, and dispersal/social behaviors in 81 species representative of Fringillidae, a bird family with available natural history information and that shows variability for all these traits. The ancestrality of strategy A was supported for three of the four syndromes, the ancestrality of generalism having a weaker support, except for the core group Carduelinae (69 species). It appeared that two different B‐strategies evolved from the ancestral state A, both associated with highly predictable environments: one in poorly seasonal environments, called B1, with species living permanently in lowland tropics, with “slow pace of life” and weak sexual dimorphism, and one in highly seasonal environments, called B2, with species breeding out‐of‐the‐tropics, migratory, with a “fast pace of life” and high sexual dimorphism.

Highlights

  • Ponge (2013) suggested that a wide array of traits related to ecological niche requirements, life history (e.g., K-­ vs. r-­selection), behavior, and selection mode co-­evolved along gradients of environmental predictability, forming two suites of generalized syndromes or evolutionary strategies

  • We selected the bird family Fringillidae because (1) it is distributed worldwide, (2) it is known for its wide range of variation in terms of ecological specialization, life history, social/dispersal behavior, and sexual dimorphism (Clement, Harris, & Davis, 2011), and (3) its phylogeny is well-­established on the basis of representatives of all existing lineages (Zuccon, Prŷs-­Jones, Rasmussen, & Ericson, 2012)

  • Even though most species/traits are spread along a continuous r-­K gradient (Jones, 1976), it has been theoretically (Blanck, Tedesco, & Lamouroux, 2007) and empirically demonstrated (Flegr, 1997) that species whose reproductive strategy lies in the middle of the r-­K continuum are at disadvantage, justifying the distinction of two opposite strategies

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Ponge (2013) suggested that a wide array of traits related to ecological niche requirements (e.g., specialist vs. generalist), life history (e.g., K-­ vs. r-­selection), behavior (e.g., residents vs. dispersers, territorial vs. gregarious), and selection mode (e.g., sexual vs. natural selection) co-­evolved along gradients of environmental predictability, forming two suites of generalized syndromes or evolutionary strategies. We selected the bird family Fringillidae (i.e., true finches) because (1) it is distributed worldwide, (2) it is known for its wide range of variation in terms of ecological specialization, life history, social/dispersal behavior, and sexual dimorphism (Clement, Harris, & Davis, 2011), and (3) its phylogeny is well-­established on the basis of representatives of all existing lineages (Zuccon, Prŷs-­Jones, Rasmussen, & Ericson, 2012) This bird family is a good model to follow the evolution of multiple suites of traits, as attested by several studies performed on cardueline finches (Badyaev, 1997a,b,c; Badyaev & Ghalambor, 1998; Badyaev, Hill, & Weckworth, 2002)

| MATERIAL AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
| CONCLUSIONS
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