Disentangling ancient interactions: A new extinct passerine provides insights on character displacement among extinct and extant Island finches
Fecha
2010Resumen
Background: Evolutionary studies of insular biotas are based mainly on extant taxa, although such biotas represent artificial
subsets of original faunas because of human-caused extinctions of indigenous species augmented by introduced exotic
taxa. This makes it difficult to obtain a full understanding of the history of ecological interactions between extant sympatric
species. Morphological bill variation of Fringilla coelebs and F. teydea (common and blue chaffinches) has been previously
studied in the North Atlantic Macaronesian archipelagos. Character displacement between both species has been argued to
explain bill sizes in sympatry. However, this explanation is incomplete, as similar patterns of bill size have been recorded in
F. coelebs populations from islands with and without F. teydea.
Methodology/Principal Findings: The discovery of a new extinct species in Tenerife (Canary Islands), here named Carduelis
aurelioi n. sp. (slender-billed greenfinch), provides the opportunity to study ancient ecological interactions among
Macaronesian finches. To help understand the evolutionary histories of forest granivores in space and time, we have
performed a multidisciplinary study combining: (1) morphological analyses and radiocarbon dating (11,460660 yr BP) of the
new taxon and, (2) molecular divergence among the extant finch species and populations in order to infer colonization
times (1.99 and 1.09 My for F. teydea and F. coelebs respectively).
Conclusion/Significance: C. aurelioi, F. coelebs and F. teydea co-habited in Tenerife for at least one million years. The unique
anatomical trends of the new species, namely chaffinch-like beak and modified hind and forelimbs, reveal that there was a
process of divergence of resource competition traits among the three sympatric finches. The results of our study, combined
with the presence of more extinct greenfinches in other Macaronesian islands with significant variation in their beak sizes,
suggests that the character displacement has influenced patterns of divergence in bill size and shape on other
Macaronesian islands as well.