Rawlence Nicolas J, Till Charlotte E, Easton Luke J, Spencer Hamish G, Schuckard Rob, Melville David S, Scofield R Paul, Tennyson Alan J D, Rayner Matt J, Waters Jonathan M, Kennedy Martyn
Otago Palaeogenetics Laboratory, Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand; Canterbury Museum, Christchurch, New Zealand.
School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2017 Oct;115:197-209. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2017.07.011. Epub 2017 Aug 10.
New Zealand's endemic King Shag (Leucocarbo carunculatus) has occupied only a narrow portion of the northeastern South Island for at least the past 240years. However, pre-human Holocene fossil and archaeological remains have suggested a far more widespread distribution of the three Leucocarbo species (King, Otago, Foveaux) on mainland New Zealand at the time of Polynesian settlement in the late 13th Century CE. We use modern and ancient DNA, and morphometric and osteological analyses, of modern King Shags and Holocene fossil Leucocarbo remains to assess the pre-human distribution and taxonomic status of the King Shag on mainland New Zealand, and the resultant conservation implications. Our analyses show that the King Shag was formerly widespread around southern coasts of the North Island and the northern parts of the South Island but experienced population and lineage extinctions, and range contraction, probably after Polynesian arrival. This history parallels range contractions of other New Zealand seabirds. Conservation management of the King Shag should take into account this species narrow distribution and probable reduced genetic diversity. Moreover, combined genetic, morphometric and osteological analyses of prehistoric material from mainland New Zealand suggest that the now extinct northern New Zealand Leucocarbo populations comprised a unique lineage. Although these distinctive populations were previously assigned to the King Shag (based on morphological similarities and geographic proximity to modern Leucocarbo populations), we herein describe them as a new species, the Kohatu Shag (Leucocarbo septentrionalis). The extinction of this species further highlights the dramatic impacts Polynesians and introduced predators had on New Zealand's coastal and marine biodiversity. The prehistoric presence of at least four species of Leucocarbo shag on mainland NZ further highlights its status as a biodiversity hotspot for Phalacrocoracidae.
至少在过去的240年里,新西兰特有的国王鸬鹚(Leucocarbo carunculatus)仅占据了南岛东北部的一小部分地区。然而,全新世人类出现之前的化石和考古遗迹表明,在公元13世纪后期波利尼西亚人定居时,这三种鸬鹚属物种(国王鸬鹚、奥塔哥鸬鹚、弗沃克斯鸬鹚)在新西兰大陆的分布要广泛得多。我们对现代国王鸬鹚和全新世化石鸬鹚属遗迹进行了现代和古代DNA分析,以及形态测量和骨骼学分析,以评估国王鸬鹚在新西兰大陆人类出现之前的分布情况和分类地位,以及由此产生的保护意义。我们的分析表明,国王鸬鹚以前广泛分布在北岛南部海岸和南岛北部,但可能在波利尼西亚人到来之后经历了种群和谱系灭绝,以及分布范围收缩。这段历史与其他新西兰海鸟的分布范围收缩情况相似。国王鸬鹚的保护管理应考虑到该物种分布范围狭窄以及可能降低的遗传多样性。此外,对新西兰大陆史前材料进行的基因、形态测量和骨骼学综合分析表明,现已灭绝的新西兰北部鸬鹚种群构成了一个独特的谱系。尽管这些独特的种群此前被归为国王鸬鹚(基于形态相似性以及与现代鸬鹚属种群的地理接近性),但我们在此将它们描述为一个新物种,即科哈图鸬鹚(Leucocarbo septentrionalis)。该物种的灭绝进一步凸显了波利尼西亚人和引入的捕食者对新西兰沿海和海洋生物多样性造成的巨大影响。新西兰大陆至少有四种鸬鹚属鸬鹚的史前存在进一步凸显了其作为鸬鹚科生物多样性热点地区的地位。