Australian Centre for Ancient DNA, School of Biological Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia
Australian Centre for Ancient DNA, School of Biological Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
Biol Lett. 2018 Apr;14(4). doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2017.0617.
Australia's iconic emu () is the only living representative of its genus, but fossil evidence and reports from early European explorers suggest that three island forms (at least two of which were dwarfs) became extinct during the nineteenth century. While one of these-the King Island emu-has been found to be conspecific with Australian mainland emus, little is known about how the other two forms-Kangaroo Island and Tasmanian emus-relate to the others, or even the size of Tasmanian emus. We present a comprehensive genetic and morphological analysis of diversity, including data from one of the few definitively genuine Tasmanian emu specimens known. Our genetic analyses suggest that all the island populations represent sub-populations of mainland Further, the size of island emus and those on the mainland appears to scale linearly with island size but not time since isolation, suggesting that island size-and presumably concomitant limitations on resource availability-may be a more important driver of dwarfism in island emus, though its precise contribution to emu dwarfism remains to be confirmed.
澳大利亚的标志性物种鸸鹋()是其属中唯一现存的物种,但化石证据和早期欧洲探险家的报告表明,三种岛屿形式(至少其中两种是矮种)在 19 世纪灭绝。其中一种——国王岛鸸鹋——已被发现与澳大利亚大陆鸸鹋同属,但对于另外两种——袋鼠岛鸸鹋和塔斯马尼亚鸸鹋——与其他物种的关系,甚至是塔斯马尼亚鸸鹋的大小,知之甚少。我们对多样性进行了全面的遗传和形态分析,包括来自已知的少数几个真正的塔斯马尼亚鸸鹋标本之一的数据。我们的遗传分析表明,所有岛屿种群都代表了大陆种群的亚种群。此外,岛屿鸸鹋和大陆鸸鹋的大小似乎与岛屿大小呈线性相关,而与隔离以来的时间无关,这表明岛屿大小——以及随之而来的资源可用性限制——可能是岛屿鸸鹋矮小的一个更重要驱动因素,尽管它对鸸鹋矮小的具体贡献仍有待证实。