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Genes reveal surprising relationship
A COMPREHENSIVE analysis of the genes of aquatic birds has
revealed a family tree dramatically different from traditional
relationship groupings based on the birds' body structure,
according to a research report published in the Journal of the
Royal Society.
The most startling and unexpected finding of the study is that
the closest living relative of the elegant flamingo, with its
long legs built for wading, is not another long-legged species of
wading bird but the squat grebe, with its short legs built for
diving. The two species, whose genes surprisingly are more
similar to each other's than to those of any other bird,
otherwise show no outward resemblance, according to Blair Hedges,
an evolutionary biologist at Penn State.
Hedges leads one of the two research groups that collaborated on
the study by separately performing two different kinds of genetic
analyses using DNA samples obtained from separate sources. The
other group is led by John A. W. Kirsch, professor of zoology and
director of the Zoological Museum at the University of Wisconsin.
"We knew people might have a hard time accepting these results so
we decided to publish our two studies together in the same paper
because the weight of the combined evidence is quite strong,"
Hedges says.
Another surprising implication of the study is that physical
features like long legs and webbed feet - traditionally used to
group birds of a feather into different flocks on the bird family
tree - did not appear just once during the history of bird
evolution, as had been the hallmark assumption of the traditional
classification system. Instead, the study suggests such
structures evolved repeatedly in the history of different aquatic
bird species. Because many of the species in the study are
located on the "twigs" at the ends of a branch of the bird family
tree - not farther back in time on its "trunk"--the study also
suggests that "evolutionary change in aquatic birds has proceeded
at a faster pace than previously recognized," explains Marcel van
Tuinen, a member of the Hedegs research team.
The scientists say they feel the conclusions of their research
are strengthened by their combination of two different analysis
techniques, their use of genetic material from separate sources,
and the comprehensiveness of both studies. The Kirsch lab used a
technique called "DNA/DNA hybridization" and the Hedges lab used
a technique called "DNA sequencing."
The DNA/DNA hybridization technique is a method of gauging the
degree of genetic similarity between two species by comparing all
the genetic material - the entire genome - contained in the DNA
molecules of each species. "In birds, the entire genome comprises
about 20 to 30 thousand or more genes," Hedges says.
In contrast, the DNA sequencing technique is a more targeted
comparison of the composition of individual genes - specific
sections of the DNA molecules that carry the codes for specific
inherited traits. The sequencing technique compares the actual
order, or sequence, of the innermost pairs of molecules in the
gene, known as "base pairs," which are strung side by side along
the core of the DNA molecule and which hold together the
molecules that make up its two sides.
The hybridization studies in the Kirsch lab included 21 species
representing the major families of aquatic birds. The sequencing
studies in the Hedges lab included 6 genes from each of 28
species - the largest such study ever performed for aquatic
birds.
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