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Morphological relationships of the Wheatears (genus Oenanthe)
Authors:Mohammad Kaboli  Mansour Aliabadian  Atefeh Chamani  Eric Pasquet  Roger Prodon
Institution:17362. Department of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Natural Resources, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran
27362. Departments of Biology, Faculty of Science, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Mashhad, Iran
37362. Department of Environment, Faculty of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Khorasgan(Isfahan) Branch, Islamic Azad University, Isfahan, Iran
47362. Laboratoire de Zoologie Mammiféres et Oiseaux, Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, 55 rue Buffon, F-75005, Paris, France
57362. Laboratoire Ecologie et Biogéogiaphie des Vertébrés (EPHE), Centre d’Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive, UMR 5175, 1919 route de Mende, 34293, Montpellier cedex 5, France
Abstract:The genus Oenanthe comprises approximately 22 species, of which 16 species are restricted to the desert belt of the Palaearctic and Afrotropic regions, where they are often the most conspicuous passerines. Although they have been the subjects of some morphological and ecological studies, no complete morphometrical data has been used to verify their taxonomic relationships, and, the species relationships are still debated. Overall morphometrical similarities between Wheatears and their relationships in size and shape were assessed using measurements of 27 biometrical variables on 417 museum specimens. The 22 Wheatear species comprise some morphological groups: long migratory vegetation-tolerant species (O. pleschanka, O. hispanica, O. cypriaca and O. deserti), ground-dwelling migratory (O. isabellina and O. oenanthe), and sedentary (O. bottae, O. heuglini and O. pileata) of steppe-like habitants, relatively heavy and rock-dwelling species (O. leucura and O. monticola), inhabiting the most arid areas (O. monacha, O. leucopyga and O. alboniger), and finally a central core of medium-sized partial migrants, largely overlapping in morphometric space, that do not present any evident specialization (O. lugens, O. chrysopygia, O. xanthoprymna and O. finschii). It seems Wheatear species are well distributed in a morpho-space of size and shape with moderate overlaps and few hiatuses corresponding to a morphological continuum of species. Furthermore, our results largely hiatuses corresponding to a morphological continuum of species. Furthermore, our results largely differ from previous phylogenetic hypotheses (based on ecological, behavioural, and chromatic characters), but, are in congruence with molecular data.
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