TL;DR: The disjunct affinities among the accreted terranes (Vogelkop, Huon, etc.), together with the absences there of groups like Pteridophora, are incompatible with usual dispersal models of New Guinea biogeography, but are compatible with recent analyses of vicarianceBiogeography and terrane tectonics.
Abstract: Aim
The subspecies of Paradisaeidae are mapped and the distribution patterns correlated with aspects of New Guinea tectonics.
Location
New Guinea, the northern Moluccas, and north-eastern Australia.
Methods
Panbiogeographical analysis (Craw et al., 1999).
Results
Pteridophora, Loboparadisaea, Parotia carolae and others are notably absent from the Vogelkop, Huon and Papuan Peninsulas, accreted terranes in the north and east of New Guinea. Coupled with this, putative sister taxa in each of Astrapia, Parotia and Paradisaea show massively disjunct affinities between the Vogelkop and Huon Peninsulas: Astrapia nigra (Vogelkop) and A. rothschildi (Huon Peninsula); Parotia sefilata (Vogelkop) and P. wahnesi (Huon); and Paradisaea rubra (Western Papuan Islands by the Vogelkop) and P. guilielmi (Huon Peninsula). In the last two species the males have oil-green throat coloration extending above the eye to cover the front of the crown, the eye is reddish-brown not yellow, the rectrices are longer and the inner vane of the outermost primaries is not emarginate.
Main conclusions
The disjunct affinities among the accreted terranes (Vogelkop, Huon, etc.), together with the absences there of groups like Pteridophora, are incompatible with usual dispersal models of New Guinea biogeography, but are compatible with recent analyses of vicariance biogeography and terrane tectonics (Michaux, 1994; Flannery, 1995; de Boer & Duffels, 1996a,b; Polhemus, 1996; Polhemus & Polhemus, 1998). Birds of paradise are sedentary forest dwellers with small home ranges and are tolerant of disturbance, and so it is suggested that populations have been caught in the dramatic geological movements (lateral and vertical) of different parts of New Guinea and this has led to fragmentation and juxtaposition of ranges, as well as altitudinal anomalies.
TL;DR: Birds of paradise are sedentary forest dwellers with small home ranges and are tolerant of disturbance, it is suggested that populations have been caught in the dramatic geological uplift and downwarping of different parts of New Guinea.
Abstract: Aim
The paper reviews the biogeography and ecology of New Guinea using the birds of paradise (Paradisaeidae) as an illustrative example.
Location
New Guinea, the Moluccas, North-eastern Australia.
Methods
Panbiogeographic analysis (Craw et al., 1999).
Results
The family Paradisaeidae is interpreted as the main New Guinea vicariant in Sibley & Ahlquist’s (1990) Corvinae. It has evolved mainly on the New Guinea orogen, extending, like the orogen, to the northern Moluccas and the Milne Bay islands, but not present north of it on Karkar Island or New Britain. Within the orogen, Vogelkop – Huon Peninsula disjunctions (1500 km) occur between putative sister species in Paradisaea, Astrapia and Parotia. Whatever taxonomic rank these affinities warrant, the biogeographic connection is inexplicable by ‘jump’ dispersal from the mainland, but is compatible with an accreted terrane model of New Guinea tectonics including massive lateral strike-slip movement. This would also account for many aspects of distribution of Paradisaeidae within the New Guinea highlands, and also disjunctions between Sulawesi and the Bismarck Archipelago in the related genus Artamus.
Main conclusions
Birds of paradise are sedentary forest dwellers with small home ranges and are tolerant of disturbance. It is suggested that populations have been caught in the dramatic geological uplift and downwarping of different parts of New Guinea. This has led to fragmentation and juxtaposition of ranges, and determined the altitudinal range of the taxa (including altitudinal ‘anomalies’). Areas of endemism in birds of paradise include Quaternary volcanoes. In New Guinea large areas have eventually been covered by lava flows of different volcanic phases, but the living communities, including local endemics, may remain more or less in situ by constantly colonizing younger flows from adjacent older flows. In this way older life can ‘float’ on younger stratigraphy. At least five, possibly six, of the fifteen genera in subfam. Paradisaeinae are known to occur in mangrove. The ancestors of Paradisaeidae and other New Guinea bird families such as Ptilonorhynchidae probably included birds of the mangrove, beach forest and coastal hinterland which have been stranded in central Australia following marine transgressions (Ptilonorhynchidae) and uplifted in New Guinea during the Tertiary orogeny (Ptilonorhynchidae and Paradisaeidae).