Abstract

The small Neotropical finches called capuchinos are outstanding because they have experienced one of the most recent and explosive avian radiations ever documented for birds. Despite very low morphological and niche divergence among species, many of them are reproductively isolated when in sympatry due to strong sexual selection in plumage traits. However, a specific pair of mostly parapatric species, the Pearly-bellied, Sporophila pileata, and the Copper Seedeaters, S. bouvreuil, has confounded taxonomists because individuals with intermediate color patterns can be found. By analyzing diagnostic COI mtDNA sequences and adult male plumage we provide evidence for hybridization. Paternity tests using microsatellites also indicated that representatives with intermediate plumage pattern can be fertile. Our findings are consistent with the classification of S. bouvreuil and S. pileata as distinct taxa, but we demonstrate that the sexual selection mechanisms involved in the isolation of other reproductively sympatric capuchinos are not applicable to this pair of species, likely because of reduced barriers to mate recognition.

Highlights

  • Diverged taxa can be poorly distinguishable with genetic markers due to hybridization and genetic introgression after secondary contact, or to incomplete lineage sorting [1, 2]

  • These authors have attributed this finding to incomplete lineage sorting, which could lead to the sharing of some mtDNA haplotypes between species, or to hybridization, which could not be confirmed without population level analyses

  • GenBank sequences from these two individuals were included in our phylogenetic reconstruction, and together with three other typical bouvreuil sampled by us, they were again placed in the pileata clade

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Summary

Introduction

Diverged taxa can be poorly distinguishable with genetic markers due to hybridization and genetic introgression after secondary contact, or to incomplete lineage sorting [1, 2]. The group of small Neotropical finches named ’’capuchinos’’ is one such example. These birds form a monophyletic group of 12 species within the genus Sporophila (Aves, Thraupidae), and like the other congeners, they are sexually dimorphic and are characterized by the specialization in the consumption of grass seeds [5,6,7]. The capuchinos are distributed from northern South America to most of Brazil, eastern Bolivia, northeastern Argentina, and Uruguay [5].

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