Abstract

Specialization to nectarivory is associated with radiations within different bird groups, including parrots. One of them, the Australasian lories, were shown to be unexpectedly species rich. Their shift to nectarivory may have created an ecological opportunity promoting species proliferation. Several morphological specializations of the feeding tract to nectarivory have been described for parrots. However, they have never been assessed in a quantitative framework considering phylogenetic nonindependence. Using a phylogenetic comparative approach with broad taxon sampling and 15 continuous characters of the digestive tract, we demonstrate that nectarivorous parrots differ in several traits from the remaining parrots. These trait-changes indicate phenotype–environment correlations and parallel evolution, and may reflect adaptations to feed effectively on nectar. Moreover, the diet shift was associated with significant trait shifts at the base of the radiation of the lories, as shown by an alternative statistical approach. Their diet shift might be considered as an evolutionary key innovation which promoted significant non-adaptive lineage diversification through allopatric partitioning of the same new niche. The lack of increased rates of cladogenesis in other nectarivorous parrots indicates that evolutionary innovations need not be associated one-to-one with diversification events.

Highlights

  • Most flowering plants are pollinated by insects, a considerable number of tropical angiosperms are pollinated by birds and bats specialized on nectarivorous diets (Bawa 1990; Sekercioglu 2006; Fleming and Muchhala 2008)

  • Akaike’s information criterion (AIC) was used as a heuristic indicator for the fit of the different models (Akaike 1974) and we considered an increase in model-fit as significant when the reduction in AIC score in a more complex model was ≥4 (Burnham and Anderson 2002)

  • Within Platycercini, the sister group relationship of Lathamus to a clade consisting of Prosopeia, Cyanoramphus and Eunymphicus was highly supported in congruence with other studies (Schweizer et al 2010, 2011, 2013; Joseph et al 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Most flowering plants are pollinated by insects, a considerable number of tropical angiosperms are pollinated by birds and bats specialized on nectarivorous diets (Bawa 1990; Sekercioglu 2006; Fleming and Muchhala 2008). The swift parrot Lathamus discolor of Australia, the genus Loriculus of Australasia and IndoMalaysia as well as the genus Brotogeris of the Neotropics are all supposed to depend on nectar as food (Homberger 1980; Gu€ntert 1981; Forshaw 1989; Collar 1997). Their specialization to nectarivory has evolved in convergence to that of the lories (cf Wright et al 2008; Schweizer et al 2010, 2011)

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