Saturday, September 13, 2014
On the big island, the first honeycreeper hybrid, between the redbirds `i`iwi and `apapane
There is a new native Hawaiian bird in the forest, a cross
of two of the brightest jewels of the Island landscape—the red `i`iwi and the
red `apapane.
(Image: The first-ever cross between an `i`iwi and `apapane. At left an `i`iwi, at right an `apapane, and at center the hybrid. All photos by Olga Lansdorp, courtesy of the authors.)
The unusual bird was caught in 2011 in the Upper Waiakea Forest
Reserve on Hawai`i Island, and released after being banded. A DNA analysis
performed on a single feather taken from the bird confirmed that it was the first-known
cross of the two native honeycreepers.
A study on the find was published in the Wilson Journal of
Ornithology by authors Jessie Knowlton of the Michigan Technological University
and the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, David Flashpohler of Michigan
Technological University, and Rotzel Mcinerney and Robert Fleischer, both of
Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute. (The Wilson Journal of Ornithology
126(3):562–568, 2014)
The paper is entitled, “First Record of Hybridization in the
Hawaiian Honeycreepers: `I`iwi (Vestiaria
coccinea) x `Apapane (Himatione
sanguinea).” The abstract is here.
Two key questions, of course, are opposite sides of the
investigation: How did this happen, and why didn’t this happen before? With Darwin’s Galapagos finches, such crosses between
species are known to occur. In Hawai`i, until now, they have not been known to
happen.
“Our discovery is important in light of recent evidence that
introgression and hybridization play important roles in speciation, maintenance
of genetic diversity, and the movement of advantageous alleles within and between
species,” the authors write.
DNA testing found that the bird’s mother was an `i`iwi and
the father was the `apapane.
The bird looked a little like both parents. Its size was
closer to that of a male `apapane. Its color, based on a photograph with the
paper, seems intermediate between the bright red of the `apapane and the
orange-red of the `i`iwi.
But its bill showed the combination most clearly. The `i`iwi
has a long, curved, orange-colored bill. The `apapane has a short, black bill.
The hybrid bird has a longish, curved bill about halfway between the lengths of
the parent bills, and black in color.
The bird is a male, and the analysis could not determine
whether the it was capable of reproducing.
“This individual is the first hybrid ever confirmed for
Hawaiian honeycreepers, despite ongoing study of these species for (more than) 40
years with thousands of individuals captured and banded and many thousands of specimens
collected for museums,” the authors write.
Hawaiian honeycreepers are all believed to have evolved from
a single parent bird, developing into an amazing range of colors, beak types,
food preferences and habitat requirements. The `i`iwi and `apapane, then, are
very distant cousins—genetic work suggested the species diverged from each
other 1.6 million years ago.
And they are different in a number of ways that argue
against genetic crossing.
“The circumstances that gave rise to a mating between a
female `i`iwi and a male `apapane are difficult to imagine. `I`iwi are aggressive
and socially dominant to `apapane, and the average bill length of `i`iwi is
more than 10 mm greater than `apapane. Further, `i`iwi are larger than `apapane,
and it is unusual for a female of a larger species to choose to mate with a
male of a smaller species,” the authors write.
On the other hand, they are perhaps the most likely
honeycreepers to cross.
“`Apapane and `i`iwi are more similar in courtship behavior
to each other than with other honeycreeper species and have overlapping
breeding seasons,” Knowlton and the team write.
In the forest area where the hybrid bird was found, `i`iwi
are about a quarter as common as `apapane. Avian malaria is hitting hard the
vulnerable `i`iwi populations, while `apapane, while also impacted, show some
resistance to the disease.
One of the things that isn’t known is whether there might be
other such crosses, or whether this bird was able to reproduce. If so, there
might be birds in the Upper Waiakea Forest Reserve that are ¾ `i`iwi and `1/4
`apapane, or the reverse.
That’s potentially interesting, because disease-resistant
crosses could preserve DNA from the emblematic Hawaiian redbirds.
There is still plenty of mystery in this story. The hybrid bird, known only by its band number of 2551-51657,
was released back into the wild after being banded, and has never been seen
again.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2014
Posted by Jan T at 8:52 AM
Labels: Birds, Conservation, Invasive Species, Zoology
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