TY - JOUR
T1 - The evolution of palearctic migration- the case for southern ancestry
AU - Safriel, Uriel N.
PY - 1995
Y1 - 1995
N2 - The thesis developed in this paper is that the phenomenon of bird migration is founded on (1) pre-adaptations for flight that reduce the cost of long-distance directional movement, and (2) intensive reproductive effort that makes the use of the northern short season of high food abundance very beneficial for breeding. It is proposed that the first step in the evolution of migration is longdistance pre-breeding dispersal of a fraction of the juveniles of southern species to northern latitudes, where they breed and then disperse south. Further adaptations for timing and navigation mechanisms tum the dispersal into directional seasonal migration. Finally, reproductive isolation, drift, andselection result in speciation of the northern-breeding migratory fraction from the nonmigratory southern-breeding ancestor species. The evidence supporting this hypothesis is scanty and circumstantial, and includes the high incidence of migration among northern species, several examples of species that represent steps in speciation of Palearctic migrants from resident African relatives, and the high incidence in many avifaunas of “vagrants” and “occasional breeders” that may represent the initial stages of an ongoing evolution towards migration. Research attention should be paid to the phenomenon of post-fledging juvenile dispersal as a potential precursor of the evolution of migration.
AB - The thesis developed in this paper is that the phenomenon of bird migration is founded on (1) pre-adaptations for flight that reduce the cost of long-distance directional movement, and (2) intensive reproductive effort that makes the use of the northern short season of high food abundance very beneficial for breeding. It is proposed that the first step in the evolution of migration is longdistance pre-breeding dispersal of a fraction of the juveniles of southern species to northern latitudes, where they breed and then disperse south. Further adaptations for timing and navigation mechanisms tum the dispersal into directional seasonal migration. Finally, reproductive isolation, drift, andselection result in speciation of the northern-breeding migratory fraction from the nonmigratory southern-breeding ancestor species. The evidence supporting this hypothesis is scanty and circumstantial, and includes the high incidence of migration among northern species, several examples of species that represent steps in speciation of Palearctic migrants from resident African relatives, and the high incidence in many avifaunas of “vagrants” and “occasional breeders” that may represent the initial stages of an ongoing evolution towards migration. Research attention should be paid to the phenomenon of post-fledging juvenile dispersal as a potential precursor of the evolution of migration.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0028984193&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00212210.1995.10688811
DO - 10.1080/00212210.1995.10688811
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AN - SCOPUS:0028984193
SN - 0021-2210
VL - 41
SP - 417
EP - 431
JO - Israel Journal of Zoology
JF - Israel Journal of Zoology
IS - 3
ER -