Abstract

Sexual dichromatism in birds is often attributed to selection for elaboration in males. However, evolutionary changes in either sex can result in plumage differences between them, and such changes can result in either gains or losses of dimorphism. We reconstructed the evolution of plumage colors in both males and females of species in Maluridae, a family comprising the fairy-wrens (Malurus, Clytomias, Sipodotus), emu-wrens (Stipiturus), and grasswrens (Amytornis). Our results show that, across species, males and females differ in their patterns of color evolution. Male plumage has diverged at relatively steady rates, whereas female coloration has changed dramatically in some lineages and little in others. Accordingly, in comparisons against evolutionary models, plumage changes in males best fit a Brownian motion (BM) model, whereas plumage changes in females fit an Ornstein Uhlenbeck (OU) multioptimum model, with different adaptive peaks corresponding to distributions in either Australia or New Guinea. Levels of dichromatism were significantly associated with latitude, with greater dichromatism in more southerly taxa. Our results suggest that current patterns of plumage diversity in fairy-wrens are a product of evolutionary changes in both sexes, driven in part by environmental differences across the distribution of the family.

Highlights

  • The evolution and diversity of coloration in birds has long interested evolutionary biologists (Darwin 1871; Cronin 1991; Andersson 1994)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • In total, more plumage changes were reconstructed in males (146 changes) than in females (135 changes), the mean number of changes in each plumage character on the tree did not differ between the sexes

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Summary

Introduction

The evolution and diversity of coloration in birds has long interested evolutionary biologists (Darwin 1871; Cronin 1991; Andersson 1994) Both sexual dichromatism and monochromatism are common in birds, and at least 150 independent transitions between these states have occurred within the passerines alone (Price and Birch 1996; but see Eaton 2005). This suggests that plumage is subject to many different and fluctuating selection pressures.

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