Abstract:The identity of Scytalopus speluncae (Ménétriés, 1835) (Aves: Passeriformes: Rhinocryptidae), a tapaculo from southeastern Brazil, has been the matter of debate during the last eight years. A group of ornithologists considers that the nomen Scytalopus speluncae should be attributed to a species endemic to coastal mountains of southeastern Brazil, whereas another group considers it a species from the drier environments of another mountain belt in Minas Gerais, southeastern Brazil. Both research groups disagree … Show more
“…Shortly thereafter, 3 new species were described: S. notorius (Raposo et al 2006), S. diamantinensis (Diamantina Tapaculo; Bornschein et al 2007), and S. petrophilus (Rock Tapaculo; Whitney et al 2010). The first of these was soon relegated to a junior synonym of S. speluncae by , a position followed by Fjeldså (2013) and strongly endorsed by the South American Classification Committee (Remsen et al 2013;contra Raposo et al 2012, Nemésio et al 2013. Therefore, within~12 yr, the Brazilian Scytalopus, collectively known as the S. speluncae group (Maurício 2005, Raposo et al 2006, jumped from 2 to 6 accepted species.…”
BioOne Complete (complete.BioOne.org) is a full-text database of 200 subscribed and open-access titles in the biological, ecological, and environmental sciences published by nonprofit societies, associations, museums, institutions, and presses.
“…Shortly thereafter, 3 new species were described: S. notorius (Raposo et al 2006), S. diamantinensis (Diamantina Tapaculo; Bornschein et al 2007), and S. petrophilus (Rock Tapaculo; Whitney et al 2010). The first of these was soon relegated to a junior synonym of S. speluncae by , a position followed by Fjeldså (2013) and strongly endorsed by the South American Classification Committee (Remsen et al 2013;contra Raposo et al 2012, Nemésio et al 2013. Therefore, within~12 yr, the Brazilian Scytalopus, collectively known as the S. speluncae group (Maurício 2005, Raposo et al 2006, jumped from 2 to 6 accepted species.…”
BioOne Complete (complete.BioOne.org) is a full-text database of 200 subscribed and open-access titles in the biological, ecological, and environmental sciences published by nonprofit societies, associations, museums, institutions, and presses.
“…Both live under different climatic conditions as cross-projections of population-specific SDMs show (Lozana-Jaramillo et al 2014). In addition, SDMs were applied for recently described taxa; a prominent example is different members of the Neotropical tapaculos (Rhinocryptidae) (Avendaño and Donagan 2015;Nemésio et al 2013).…”
Avian evolutionary studies have recently benefited from a plethora of new techniques as well as conceptual progresses on the evolution of ecological niches. The so-called species distribution models (SDMs) allow for niche quantifications in a way that permits comparisons among species and populations. This review will introduce the theoretical background of niche concepts and niche conservatism, followed by an outline of popular methods for modeling and analyzing environmental niches. A comparison of ecological niches among native and non-native populations of invasive species can reveal niche shifts. They can point to evolutionary changes that evolved over comparatively short time scales of decades to a few centuries. On the other hand, ecological niches can also remain conserved over the invasion process. In a similar way, comparisons of ecological niches are also applicable among closely related taxa. Thereby, it is possible to infer changes of ecological niches over longer time scales and reveal otherwise hidden patterns and processes in the evolutionary history of avian clades. Finally, SDMs offer the potential to contribute to integrative taxonomic studies.
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