@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18675,
author = {Matthew J Phillips and Gillian C. Gibb and E. A. Crimp and David Penny},
title = {Tinamous and moa flock together: mitochondrial genome sequence analysis reveals independent losses of flight among ratites},
year = {2010},
keywords = {},
doi = {10.1093/sysbio/syp079},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Biology},
volume = {59},
number = {1},
pages = {90--107},
abstract = {Ratites are large, flightless birds and include the ostrich, rheas, kiwi, emu and cassowaries, along with extinct members, such as moa and elephant-birds. Previous phylogenetic analyses of complete mitochondrial genome sequences have reinforced the traditional belief that ratites are monophyletic and tinamous are their sister group. However, in these studies ratite monophyly was enforced in the analyses that modelled rate heterogeneity among variable sites. Relaxing this topological constraint results in strong support for the tinamous (which fly) nesting within ratites. Furthermore, upon reducing base compositional bias and partitioning models of sequence evolution among protein codon positions and RNA structures, the tinamou-moa clade grouped with kiwi, emu and cassowaries to the exclusion of the successively more divergent rheas and ostrich. These relationships are consistent with recent results from a large nuclear dataset, while our strongly supported finding of a tinamou-moa grouping further resolves palaeognath phylogeny. We infer flight to have been lost among ratites multiple times in temporally close association with the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction event. This circumvents requirements for transient micro-continents and island chains to explain discordance between ratite phylogeny and patterns of continental break-up. Ostriches may have dispersed to Africa from Eurasia, putting in question the status of Ratites as an iconic Gondwanan relict taxon.}
}
Analyses for Study 10184
Citation title: "Tinamous and moa flock together: mitochondrial genome sequence analysis reveals independent losses of flight among ratites".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S2528
(Status: Published).