PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New 'tree of life' traces evolution of a mysterious cotinga birds

2014-10-14
(Press-News.org) Ithaca, N.Y.—They are some of the brightest, loudest, oddest-looking, least-understood birds on the planet. Some have bulbous crests, long fleshy wattles, or Elvis-worthy pompadours in addition to electric blue, deep purple, or screaming orange feathers. But thanks to a comprehensive new evolutionary "tree of life" generated for the tropical cotinga family of South America, the door is now open to new discoveries about the more than 60 species in this amazingly diverse group of birds.

"Our study provides comprehensive insight into how nearly all the cotinga species are related to each other going all the way back to their common ancestor," says lead author Jake Berv, a Ph.D. student in the Fuller Evolutionary Biology Lab at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. "No previous attempts to understand the evolutionary history of this group have included genetic samples from nearly all the existing species."

Berv began sequencing DNA samples and compiling data in late 2010 while working as a lab technician at Yale University with co-author Prof. Rick Prum, a leading expert on cotingas. Understanding how one species is related to another within this group allows scientists to trace the evolution of specific traits and behaviors.

Berv and Prum have already started to do that. They wanted to learn if the evolution of differently-colored males and females in this bird group (sexual dimorphism) is directly linked to a breeding system in which males have multiple mates (polygyny). Darwin first theorized that the increased pressure of sexual selection in polygynous birds spurred the development of color differences between the sexes. This appears to be true for many species—but not the cotingas. When Berv and Prum examined patterns of evolution for these two traits across their new tree of life, it turned out that they didn't perfectly match up. The statistics they calculated also supported the conclusion that these traits may be evolutionarily "de-coupled" in the cotingas.

Sexual selection appears to have played a role in the evolution of non-plumage gender differences in some cotinga species.

"In one case, the Screaming Piha, the males and females look alike but the male sings one of the loudest songs on the planet," says Yale's Rick Prum. "That means male-female plumage difference alone is not evidence for sexual selection because sexual selection is also driving other traits such as voice and behavior."

"One of the biggest analytical differences between what we've done and past work is that we used a 'species tree' approach, which is potentially more accurate than what is typically applied to genetic data," Berv says. "We ran our data through more traditional types of analyses as well, and all of them strongly supported a consistent evolutionary 'tree of life.' We hope other scientists who are interested in these birds take our phylogeny and do all sorts of great things with it."

INFORMATION: The paper, "A Comprehensive Multilocus Phylogeny of the Neotropical Cotingas (Cotingidae, Aves) with a Comparative Evolutionary Analysis of Breeding System and Plumage Dimorphism and a Revised Phylogenetic Classification" is published in the journal Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution.

The research was paid for by W. R. Coe funds from Yale University and supported in part by the facilities and staff of the Yale University Faculty of Arts and Sciences High Performance Computing Center.

Study: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1055790314003133


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Current models for predicting outcomes after mild traumatic brain injury perform poorly

Current models for predicting outcomes after mild traumatic brain injury perform poorly
2014-10-14
New Rochelle, NY, October 14, 2014—For the 5-15% of patients with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) who will have lingering physical, behavioral, or cognitive problems 3 to 6 months after their injury, identification of this at-risk population is essential for early intervention. Existing models used to predict poor outcomes after mTBI are unsatisfactory, according to a new study, and new, more relevant predictive factors are different than those used in cases of moderate or severe TBI, as described in the study published in Journal of Neurotrauma, a peer-reviewed ...

New treatment designed to save more eyes from cancer

New treatment designed to save more eyes from cancer
2014-10-14
VIDEO: Some children with advanced retinoblastoma are not good candidates for conventional intraocular ophthalmic infusion therapy -- too often making removal of the eye the only viable treatment for saving their... Click here for more information. CINCINNATI – Doctors at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center have developed a new technique for treating the eye cancer retinoblastoma to improve the odds for preventing eye loss, blindness or death in children with ...

NASA sees Hurricane Gonzalo head toward Bermuda

NASA sees Hurricane Gonzalo head toward Bermuda
2014-10-14
Tropical Storm Gonzalo intensified into a hurricane late on Monday, Oct. 14 and is expected to become a major hurricane as it moves toward Bermuda. NASA's Aqua satellite saw powerful thunderstorms within the center of the storm that were dropping heavy rainfall. At 5 pm EDT, on Oct. 13 Gonzalo had become a hurricane. At that time, the center of the storm was just 20 miles southeast of St. Martin. The National Hurricane Center (NHC) noted that maximum sustained winds had increased to near 75 mph (120 kph) and additional strengthening was forecast. Gonzalo continued moving ...

Discovery of the Benešov meteorites 20 years after the bolide event

2014-10-14
Astronomy & Astrophysics is publishing the spectacular discovery of meteorite fragments 20 years after the corresponding bolide was seen in the skies of the Czech Republic. This discovery was made possible by reanalyzing the trajectory, which moved the impact line by 330 meters. Interestingly, the meteorites found on the ground are of different types, pointing to a parent asteroid of heterogeneous composition. Collisions of meter-sized meteoroids with the Earth's atmosphere are relatively rare, occurring about 40 times a year. They cause very spectacular events, known ...

Unique catalysts for hydrogen fuel cells synthesized in ordinary kitchen microwave oven

Unique catalysts for hydrogen fuel cells synthesized in ordinary kitchen microwave oven
2014-10-14
Swedish and Chinese researchers show how a unique nano-alloy composed of palladium nano-islands embedded in tungsten nanoparticles creates a new type of catalysts for highly efficient oxygen reduction, the most important reaction in hydrogen fuel cells. Their results are published in the scientific journal Nature Communications. The world's rapidly growing demand for energy and the requirement of sustainable energy production calls for an urgent change in today's fossil fuel based energy system. Research groups worldwide work intensively to develop novel advanced energy ...

Fires dot the Ukraine countryside

Fires dot the Ukraine countryside
2014-10-14
Numerous fires (marked with red dots) are burning in the Ukraine, likely as a result of regional agricultural practices. The body of water at the lower left of this true-color Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) image is the Sea of Azov. The Sea is bordered by Ukraine to the northwest, west and southwest and by Russia to the northeast, east, and southeast. To its left is the Black Sea. The location, widespread nature, and number of fires suggest that these fires were deliberately set to manage land. Farmers often use fire to return nutrients to the soil ...

Prescribed burns in Western Australia

Prescribed burns in Western Australia
2014-10-14
The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA's Aqua satellite detected fires burning in Western Australia on October 14, 2014. Matching these hot spots up to the the prescribed fire burns on Western Australia's parks and wildlife site: http://www.dpaw.wa.gov.au/management/fire/prescribed-burning/burns these fires are most likely prescribed burns used to limit bushfire outbreaks. According to the Government of Australia's Department of Parks and Wildlife, "Prescribed burning is the process of planning and applying fire to a predetermined area, under ...

Early detection window when pancreatic cancer is in the family

2014-10-14
Pancreatic cancer likely takes between 10 and 20 years to develop, providing the potential for a very "broad window" of intervention if detected early, which may be possible for people who inherit a predisposition, say Australian clinical researchers. Dr Jeremy Humphris and Professor Andrew Biankin1, from Sydney's Garvan Institute of Medical Research, analysed medical histories and tumour samples taken from a cohort of 766 pancreatic cancer patients, operated on between 1994 and 20122. Roughly 9% of these patients had a first-degree relative (parent or sibling) with ...

Seniors run for the suburbs in their golden years

2014-10-14
Montreal, October 14, 2014 — By 2040, there will be more than three times the number of Americans aged 80+ than there were in 2000. Condo towers crowding city skylines seem to reflect builders' hopes that the grey set will head to urban centres for increased services and better transit options. But new research from Concordia University suggests that the opposite is more likely to occur. In a study recently published in the Journal of Transport Geography, researcher Zachary Patterson uses census data to map seniors' moving habits. What emerges is a clear pattern: ...

NASA's Aqua satellite sees Extra-Tropical Storm Vongfong pulling away from Hokkaido, Japan

NASAs Aqua satellite sees Extra-Tropical Storm Vongfong pulling away from Hokkaido, Japan
2014-10-14
NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Extra-Tropical Storm Vongfong on Oct. 4 as it was moving away from Hokkaido, Japan, the northernmost of the big islands. Vongfong transitioned into an extra-tropical storm early on Oct. 4 as its core changed from warm to cold. The MODIS or Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer instrument aboard NASA's Aqua satellite captured a visible image of Tropical Storm Vongfong over Japan on Oct. 14 at 03:15 UTC as it was southeast of the island of Hokkaido, Japan. The image showed that south of the center of circulation was almost devoid ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New stem cell medium creates contracting canine heart muscle cells

Deep learning-assisted organogel pressure sensor for alphabet recognition and bio-mechanical motion monitoring

Efficient neutral nitrate-to-ammonia electrosynthesis using synergistic Ru-based nanoalloys on nitrogen-doped carbon

Low-temperature electrolytes for lithium-ion batteries: Current challenges, development, and perspectives

Two-dimensional MXene-based advanced sensors for neuromorphic computing intelligent application

UC Davis launches major study on language development in children with Down syndrome

Cute little marsupials pack a punch at mealtimes

Football draft season raises concerns for young player welfare

High prevalence of artificial skin lightening in under 5s, Nigerian survey suggests

Scientists discover new type of lion roar, which could help protect the iconic big cats

ChatGPT is smart, but no match for the most creative humans

Mystery of how turtles read their magnetic map solved: they feel the magnetism

From smartphone stethoscopes to voice-detected heart failure,  innovations take centre stage at ESC Digital & AI Summit   

How and when could AI be used in emergency medicine?

Report yields roadmap for Americans to age with health, wealth, and social equity

Pain research reveals new detail of how synapses strengthen

Hidden process behind 2025 Santorini earthquakes uncovered

Giant impactor Theia formed in the inner Solar System

Rebalancing lung repair with immune damage is key to surviving severe influenza

2025 Santorini seismic unrest triggered by “pumping” magma flow

Toxic gut bacteria may drive ulcerative colitis by killing protective immune cells

Rethinking where language comes from

Subverting plasmids to combat antibiotic resistance

Theia and Earth were neighbors

Calcium “waves” shape flies’ eyes

Scientists uncover new on-switch for pain signaling pathway that could lead to safer treatment and relief

Modeling of electrostatic and contact interaction between low-velocity lunar dust and spacecraft

Building a sustainable metals infrastructure: NIST report highlights key strategies

Discovering America’s ‘epilepsy belt’: First-of-its-kind national study reveals US regions with high epilepsy rates among older adults

Texting helps UCSF reach more patients with needed care

[Press-News.org] New 'tree of life' traces evolution of a mysterious cotinga birds