Discovery of a morphologically and genetically distinct population of Black‐tailed Godwits in the East Asian‐Australasian Flyway

Occurring across Eurasia, the Black‐tailed Godwit Limosa limosa has three recognized subspecies, melanuroides, limosa and islandica from east to west, respectively. With the smallest body size, melanuroides has been considered the only subspecies in the East Asian‐Australasian Flyway. Yet, observati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ibis (London, England) England), 2021-04, Vol.163 (2), p.448-462
Hauptverfasser: Zhu, Bing‐Run, Verkuil, Yvonne I., Conklin, Jesse R., Yang, Ailin, Lei, Weipan, Alves, José A., Hassell, Chris J., Dorofeev, Dmitry, Zhang, Zhengwang, Piersma, Theunis
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 448
container_title Ibis (London, England)
container_volume 163
creator Zhu, Bing‐Run
Verkuil, Yvonne I.
Conklin, Jesse R.
Yang, Ailin
Lei, Weipan
Alves, José A.
Hassell, Chris J.
Dorofeev, Dmitry
Zhang, Zhengwang
Piersma, Theunis
description Occurring across Eurasia, the Black‐tailed Godwit Limosa limosa has three recognized subspecies, melanuroides, limosa and islandica from east to west, respectively. With the smallest body size, melanuroides has been considered the only subspecies in the East Asian‐Australasian Flyway. Yet, observations along the Chinese coast indicated the presence of distinctively large individuals. Here we compared the morphometrics of these larger birds captured in northern Bohai Bay, China, with those of the three known subspecies and explore the genetic population structuring of Black‐tailed Godwits based on the control region of the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA). We found that the Bohai Godwits were indeed significantly larger than melanuroides, resembling limosa more than islandica, but with relatively longer bills than islandica. The level of genetic differentiation between Bohai Godwits and the three recognized subspecies was of similar magnitude to the differentiation among previously recognized subspecies. Based on these segregating morphological and genetic characteristics, we propose that these birds belong to a distinct population, which may be treated and described as a new subspecies.
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subjects Aquatic birds
Birds
Body size
Differentiation
genetic population structure
Genomes
migration
Mitochondria
Mitochondrial DNA
morphology
Morphometry
mtDNA
New subspecies
Physical characteristics
Population genetics
shorebirds
subspeciation
taxonomy
Waterfowl
title Discovery of a morphologically and genetically distinct population of Black‐tailed Godwits in the East Asian‐Australasian Flyway
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