Continent-wide vocal leapfrog pattern in Collared Scops Owls obfuscates species boundaries

Much confusion has surrounded the taxonomy of the Collared Scops Owl (Otus bakkamoena) complex, distributed widely across tropical and subtropical Asia. Often divided into three species, modern taxonomies disagree on its treatment, as a lack of deep mitochondrial DNA divergence is seemingly in contr...

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Main Authors: Meng Yue Wu, Frank E. Rheindt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2023-01-01
Series:Avian Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2053716623000671
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author Meng Yue Wu
Frank E. Rheindt
author_facet Meng Yue Wu
Frank E. Rheindt
author_sort Meng Yue Wu
collection DOAJ
description Much confusion has surrounded the taxonomy of the Collared Scops Owl (Otus bakkamoena) complex, distributed widely across tropical and subtropical Asia. Often divided into three species, modern taxonomies disagree on its treatment, as a lack of deep mitochondrial DNA divergence is seemingly in contrast with patterns of vocal differentiation. Analysing a dataset of territorial calls of 122 individuals across Asia, we identified a vocal leapfrog pattern in which owl populations at the eastern and western ends of the distribution sound more similar to each other but are separated by different-sounding populations in between. The boundaries between vocal types are not congruent with traditional species boundaries. Our data allow for a re-drawing of species boundaries and reveal that Collared Scops Owls follow a biogeographic pattern rare in Southeast Asian birds. However, this pattern is shared with several other owl complexes in that peninsular Malaysian populations form part of a continental Asian species centred further north in Southeast Asia rather than forming part of a Sundaic species centred in the adjacent Indonesian Archipelago.
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spelling doaj.art-36b0030a553647219bd3b56f3ae13a342023-10-28T05:06:57ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Avian Research2053-71662023-01-0114100141Continent-wide vocal leapfrog pattern in Collared Scops Owls obfuscates species boundariesMeng Yue Wu0Frank E. Rheindt1Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, 16 Science Drive 4, Singapore, Republic of Singapore; Department of Environmental Sciences, Zoological Institute, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland; Corresponding author. Department of Environmental Sciences, Zoological Institute, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, 16 Science Drive 4, Singapore, Republic of Singapore; Corresponding author. Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, 16 Science Drive 4, Singapore, Republic of Singapore.Much confusion has surrounded the taxonomy of the Collared Scops Owl (Otus bakkamoena) complex, distributed widely across tropical and subtropical Asia. Often divided into three species, modern taxonomies disagree on its treatment, as a lack of deep mitochondrial DNA divergence is seemingly in contrast with patterns of vocal differentiation. Analysing a dataset of territorial calls of 122 individuals across Asia, we identified a vocal leapfrog pattern in which owl populations at the eastern and western ends of the distribution sound more similar to each other but are separated by different-sounding populations in between. The boundaries between vocal types are not congruent with traditional species boundaries. Our data allow for a re-drawing of species boundaries and reveal that Collared Scops Owls follow a biogeographic pattern rare in Southeast Asian birds. However, this pattern is shared with several other owl complexes in that peninsular Malaysian populations form part of a continental Asian species centred further north in Southeast Asia rather than forming part of a Sundaic species centred in the adjacent Indonesian Archipelago.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2053716623000671AsiaBiogeographySpecies delimitationTaxonomyBioacoustics
spellingShingle Meng Yue Wu
Frank E. Rheindt
Continent-wide vocal leapfrog pattern in Collared Scops Owls obfuscates species boundaries
Avian Research
Asia
Biogeography
Species delimitation
Taxonomy
Bioacoustics
title Continent-wide vocal leapfrog pattern in Collared Scops Owls obfuscates species boundaries
title_full Continent-wide vocal leapfrog pattern in Collared Scops Owls obfuscates species boundaries
title_fullStr Continent-wide vocal leapfrog pattern in Collared Scops Owls obfuscates species boundaries
title_full_unstemmed Continent-wide vocal leapfrog pattern in Collared Scops Owls obfuscates species boundaries
title_short Continent-wide vocal leapfrog pattern in Collared Scops Owls obfuscates species boundaries
title_sort continent wide vocal leapfrog pattern in collared scops owls obfuscates species boundaries
topic Asia
Biogeography
Species delimitation
Taxonomy
Bioacoustics
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2053716623000671
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