INVESTIGADORES
GONZALEZ ZEVALLOS Diego Ricardo
artículos
Título:
Apparent selective advantage of leucism in a coastal population of Southern Caracaras
Autor/es:
PIM EDELAAR; JOSÉ DONAZAR; MATIAS SORIANO; MIGUEL ÁNGEL SANTILLÁN; DIEGO GONZÁLEZ ZEVALLOS; PABLO GARCIA BORBOROGLU; NORA LISNIZER; ALEJANDRO JAVIER GATTO; MARÍA LAURA AGÜERO; CARLOS A. PASSERA; LUIS AUGOSTO EBERT; MARCELO BERTELOTTI; GUILLERMO BLANCO; MONICA ABRIL; GRACIELA ESCUDERO; FLAVIO QUINTANA
Revista:
EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY RESEARCH
Editorial:
EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Tucson; Año: 2011 p. 187 - 196
ISSN:
1522-0613
Resumen:
Background: Southern caracaras are medium-sized raptors with a large range stretching to the southern tip of South America. An aberrant, leucistic plumage is found commonly along the coast of Chubut Province (Patagonia, Argentina). Leucistic birds do not produce dark melanin in their feathers. However, they are not albinos because their eyes are not red. No genetic studies of caracara plumages are known. Hypothesis: The high frequency of leucistic birds in Chubut Province arises because of natural selection. Methods: Map the distribution of leucistic individuals relative to normal individuals. Combine a variety of anecdotal natural history observations, collected over 20 years, into a logical inference. Observations: Leucistic caracaras were found only along a 250-km stretch of rocky oceanic islands and continental outcrops with large seabird colonies in Chubut Province. In the rest of their range, Southern caracaras have dark plumage. Where they do occur, leucistic birds are frequent and co-occur with dark-plumaged birds. Intermediate individuals, presumably heterozygotes, exist. Leucism is not related to age or sex. Leucistic individuals are restricted to a particular habitat. Gene flow has not homogenized the coastal and inland populations. Results: Leucism is not simply due to inbreeding producing more homozygous individuals. Leucism is not due to genetic drift. Leucism is not an environmental effect on individual physiology or development. Leucism is not a transient (plastic) phenomenon. Where they occur frequently, leucistic Southern caracaras are apparently favoured by natural selection, either directly or by pleiotropy.