Recent Speciation Between the Baltimore Oriole and The Black-backed Oriole
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2004-04-09
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Beatrice Kondo, Kevin E. Omland, Recent Speciation Between the Baltimore Oriole and The Black-backed Oriole, The Condor 106:674–680, http://www.americanornithologypubs.org/doi/pdf/10.1650/7496
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
© The American Ornithologists’ Union, 2008
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
© The American Ornithologists’ Union, 2008
Abstract
A recent phylogenetic survey of the New
World orioles (genus Icterus; Omland et al. 1999) suggested
that the Baltimore Oriole (I. galbula) and the
Black-backed Oriole (I. abeillei) are sister taxa. That
survey examined mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from
a single representative of each species in the genus.
Here, we examine mtDNA sequences from 15 Blackbacked
and 20 Baltimore Orioles. The two species appear
to be very recently diverged, with average sequence
divergences for both cytochrome b (cyt b) and
the control region indicating a probable late Pleistocene
split. Despite this very recent divergence, there
is one fixed base-pair difference between the species
in cyt b and another in the control region, suggesting
that one or both species have undergone a bottleneck
during or since speciation. This molecular evidence of
recent divergence suggests that male plumage differences
between Black-backed and Baltimore Orioles
evolved very rapidly.