“…We used phylogenetic comparative methods to test for ecomorphological associations in wing and bill morphology among migratory, partially migratory, and sedentary kingbirds ( Tyrannus ; Fitzpatrick et al , 2004). Kingbirds are flycatchers (Tyrannidae) with considerable variation in migration status and morphology within and among species, as well as a rich body of literature linking ecology and morphology (Fitzpatrick & Schauensee, 1980; Fitzpatrick, 1981; Sherry, 1984; Fitzpatrick, 1985; Cintra, 1997; Fitzpatrick et al , 2004; Gabriel & Pizo, 2005; Carvalho Provinciato et al , 2018; Gómez-Bahamón et al , 2020b). As aerodynamic theory predicts that longer, more pointed wings and shorter tails are more efficient for long-distance migratory flights (Norberg, 1995; Pennycuick, 2008), we expected migratory taxa to have longer and more pointed wings compared to sedentary taxa (Kipp, 1942, 1958; Winkler & Leisler, 1992; Mönkkönen, 1995 and references therein; Lockwood, Swaddle, & Rayner, 1998).…”