The ability to disperse over long distances can result in a high propensity for colonizing new geographic regions, including uninhabited continents, and lead to lineage diversification via allopatric speciation. However, high vagility can also result in gene flow between otherwise allopatric populations, and in some cases, parapatric or divergence-with-gene-flow models might be more applicable to widely distributed lineages. Here, we use five nuclear introns and the mitochondrial control region along with Bayesian models of isolation with migration to examine divergence, gene flow, and phylogenetic relationships within a cosmopolitan lineage comprising six species, the blue-winged ducks (genus Anas), which inhabit all continents except Anta...
Background:Main waterfowl migration systems are well understood through ringing activities. However,...
Divergence and speciation proceed through three major evolutionary forces (i.e., selection, genetic ...
Recently evolved species typically share genetic variation across their genomes due to incomplete li...
The ability to disperse over long distances can result in a high propensity for colonizing new geogr...
The ability to disperse over long distances can result in a high propensity for colonizing new geogr...
Many species have Holarctic distributions that extend across Europe, Asia, and North America. Most g...
Andean uplift played a key role in Neotropical bird diversification, yet past dispersal and genetic ...
Background:The study of speciation and maintenance of species barriers is at the core of evolutionar...
Andean uplift played a key role in Neotropical bird diversification, yet past dispersal and genetic ...
Speciation is a process in which genetic drift and selection cause divergence over tSpeciation is a ...
Heteropatric differentiation is a mode of speciation with gene flow in which divergence occurs betwe...
Phylogeographic studies often infer historical demographic processes underlying species distribution...
Speciation is primarily regarded as an ancestral split that results in two distinct taxonomic units,...
Divergence and speciation proceed through three major evolutionary forces (i.e., selection, genetic ...
Background:Main waterfowl migration systems are well understood through ringing activities. However,...
Divergence and speciation proceed through three major evolutionary forces (i.e., selection, genetic ...
Recently evolved species typically share genetic variation across their genomes due to incomplete li...
The ability to disperse over long distances can result in a high propensity for colonizing new geogr...
The ability to disperse over long distances can result in a high propensity for colonizing new geogr...
Many species have Holarctic distributions that extend across Europe, Asia, and North America. Most g...
Andean uplift played a key role in Neotropical bird diversification, yet past dispersal and genetic ...
Background:The study of speciation and maintenance of species barriers is at the core of evolutionar...
Andean uplift played a key role in Neotropical bird diversification, yet past dispersal and genetic ...
Speciation is a process in which genetic drift and selection cause divergence over tSpeciation is a ...
Heteropatric differentiation is a mode of speciation with gene flow in which divergence occurs betwe...
Phylogeographic studies often infer historical demographic processes underlying species distribution...
Speciation is primarily regarded as an ancestral split that results in two distinct taxonomic units,...
Divergence and speciation proceed through three major evolutionary forces (i.e., selection, genetic ...
Background:Main waterfowl migration systems are well understood through ringing activities. However,...
Divergence and speciation proceed through three major evolutionary forces (i.e., selection, genetic ...
Recently evolved species typically share genetic variation across their genomes due to incomplete li...