Differential rates of morphological divergence in birds

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Abstract

There are more small-bodied bird species than there are large-bodied, even on a logarithmic scale. In birds this pattern, which is also found in other higher taxa, appears not to be due to neutral evolution. It has often been suggested that the skew of body size frequency distributions is the result of a relationship between body size and the net rate of speciation, but phylogenetic analyses so far have rejected the hypothesis that small-bodied species are subject to higher net rates of speciation. On the contrary, we show that there exists a relationship between body size and its own evolutionary variability: avian families of small body size show less interspecific variation in body size than large-bodied families of similar age and species richness.

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Bokma, F. (2004). Differential rates of morphological divergence in birds. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 17(5), 933–940. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1420-9101.2004.00761.x

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