The Largest Avian RadiationThe Evolution of Perching Birds, or the Order Passeriformes

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本书揭示了雀形目鸟类如何在全世界范围内多样化和分散的非凡新历史。 它还介绍并解释了新的分类法,该分类法反映了系统发育的历史。 新的发现揭示出,许多古老的进化系只包括少数几个物种,这些物种留在了它们的起源地区或进行了有限的扩散。

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产品代码 MON0038

ISBN: 978-84-16728-33-6

SKU: MON0038 分类: ,

“这本书必将成为分类学领域的畅销书和经典之作”。

Walter Belis,《Alauda》,第 89 卷(4),2021 年,第 314-315 页

“那些希望了解世界鸟类多样性的人和那些希望了解鸟类魅力的人,无疑会被这本令人印象深刻的丰富著作所吸引、该书由 22 位作者(其中包括日内瓦自然历史博物馆的 Alice Cibois)合著,综合了 15 年来对 Passereaux(超过 6200 种,占鸟类多样性的 60%)的系统学研究!).”

Bertrand Posse,Nos Oiseaux,第 545 期,第 68/3 卷,第 162 页,2021 年 9 月

“虽然具有权威性,但文字却很轻松,版面设计也很美观。彩色、粗体的章节标题和简短的段落确保了这本书与那种会让许多读者望而生畏的高密度科学论文几乎没有任何相似之处。这本书可能是前沿研究的结晶,是对雀形目鸟类系统学的真正深入研究,但它也是如何使科学通俗易懂的杰出范例”。

Mike Hoit,《新热带鸟类》第 29 期,第 72-73 页,2021 年 8 月

“该书及时而出色地回顾了关于雀形目动物进化的最新观点,达到了我们现在所期望的 Lynx 的高标准。这本书很严肃,有时读起来很费劲,尤其是有些地方字体太小,但作者的学术成就值得称赞。最后我想说的是:重新组织野外指南以适应这种新的理解,会让鸟类爱好者在努力寻找正确的页面时头疼不已!”

David T. Parkin , British Birds 114, July 2021, p.429

“最大的鸟类辐射》从进化的角度讲述了一个关于出发、冒险和到达的经典起源故事;它将帮助任何读者从专业的角度详细了解我们现存鸟类之间的关系。真正的雀形目鸟类化石记录相对较少,我们对该类鸟类起源的了解大多是从更间接的遗传和生物地理学证据中推断出来的。即便如此,当我们从时间和空间的角度来审视这些推断时,这些推断还是让人大开眼界、茅塞顿开。

大卫-卡拉汉,《鸟类观察》,2021 年 4 月(346: 52-53)

“尽管如此,这本书细致入微、图文并茂,让人深入了解候鸟的奇妙多样性,不仅是极好的参考资料,也是人们可以随时深入了解自己感兴趣的特定候鸟群体的书籍。这本引人入胜的书显然耗费了大量心血,是一本物超所值的好书,也是您书架上许多其他鸟类书籍的好帮手。

弗兰克-兰伯特,《鸟类学家图书馆》,2021 年 1 月 31 日

重量

2.6 kg

尺寸

24 × 31 厘米

语言

English

格式

精装

页面

445

出版日期

November 2020

出版商

Lynx Edicions

说明

鸻鸟类(即过路鸟)有 6200 多种,是物种繁衍速度最快的鸟类之一。 传统的鸟类分类法主要基于 100 多年前的比较解剖学研究,但由于鸟类的解剖结构普遍过于统一,因此在解决鸟类之间的关系方面无能为力。 因此,20 世纪大部分时间使用的分类法是一种实用的安排,主要根据生态适应性将数千种物种归入几大类。

最近的 DNA 研究极大地改变了人们对鸟类进化关系的认识。 显然,鸟类起源于现代鸟类的早期辐射时期,即在南美洲、南极洲和澳大利亚的澳大利西亚大陆,在此之前,包括大型恐龙和早期鸟类在内的大部分古代陆地生物都在一场全球性灾难中灭绝了。

本书揭示了雀形目鸟类如何在整个世界范围内多样化和分散的非凡新历史。 它还介绍并解释了新的分类法,该分类法反映了系统发育的历史。 这些新发现揭示出,许多古老的进化支系只包括少数几个留在原产地或经过有限扩散的物种。 只有少数类群出现了大量的新物种,除南极洲外,各大洲仅有 5 个(共 145 个)雀形目科出现了新物种。 即便如此,全球物种丰富度的变化一般与不同环境中生产力的变化密切相关。 我们看到,由于新生态位(包括群岛)的迅速扩散,以及某些热带山脉特有物种的异常积累,新物种进化的总体速度看似恒定,但这是如何成为可能的。

除了描述经修订的雀形目鸟类进化史外,作者还试图找出导致重大进化扩张的适应性变化,包括生活史策略的转变。 他们的目标是进一步发展统一理论,解释地球生物多样性的巨大变异是如何产生的。

The Largest Avian RadiationThe Evolution of Perching Birds, or the Order Passeriformes 有 1 个评价

  1. 英语

    Gehan de Silva Wijeyeratne

    This book is an excellent example of how to make deep science less intimidating. I had wondered how Lynx Edicions that had carved a niche for being at the interface between hard science and popular natural history would tackle a subject that would appear to most people to be dense and impenetrable. Superb design and excellent writing and editing have resulted in a book which not only keen birders but others interested in topics such as speciation and biogeography would find interesting.

    The first thing that strikes you about the book is the design. Chapters and section headings are announced in capital letters in bright colours. There is generous use of delightful bird illustrations (by the multi-talented Jon Fjeldså, the lead editor) which although accurate have a lightness that leans towards arty than illustrative. All of this creates the right ‘mood music’ for anyone who may have been otherwise intimidated by the prospect of delving into the details of molecular phylogenetics.

    Over the years, many books, in particular those in the excellent Helm Family Monograph series have included introductory sections or chapters explaining molecular phylogenetics. Many books on birders’ bookshelves also contain the branching diagrams or phylogenetic trees arising from genetic studies. Furthermore, attendees of popular talks at the more serious end of ornithology are also used to discussions on molecular phylogenetics. Technical knowledge in the world of birding has come a long way in the last few decades and I suspect most birders will be comfortable with the vast majority of the text in this book. However, I would caution this is not a book for everyone with an interest in birds. You need to be someone who is already following with interest, the science behind splits and lumps at species level to follow the discussions in this book although the book is focussed at the higher taxonomic levels of families.

    The book is in three sections. Most people may find that this book can be approached by reading ‘Section 1 Background’ followed by ‘Section 3. Thematic chapters’. At the core of the book is ‘Section 2. Classification and families of passerine birds’ (pages 45- 318). Section 2 begins with an ‘An Updated Classification of Passerine Birds’ which discusses past attempts to classify the passerines and concludes with a new family tree that shows various higher taxonomic levels including suborders, infraorders, parvorders, superfamilies, subfamilies and families. The design is excellent and uses indentation, boldfacing and colours to help with easy and comfortable visual navigation. Chapters 6 to 14 discuss each family of passerines. The families are grouped in the chapters under higher taxonomic groupings. For example, chapter 8 is titled the ‘Cohort Corvoides: the crow like passerines’. Whether you have a special interest in a family, or doing some background reading in anticipation of seeing new families on a forthcoming birding trip or one of the growing band of birders who are trying to see every bird family, these chapters will be of absorbing interest, provided you are not fazed by a sciencey text. If the presence of bracketed citations and the phylogenetic diagrams are ignored, almost all of the text is readable to a keen birder of the sort who would be subscribing to a journal like ‘British Birds’. Occasionally a family account may have extensive discussion on revisions based on molecular phylogenetics; examples include the sunbirds and tanagers. Admittedly, these can be heavy reading.

    Although this is a book on passerine birds, the first four chapters will be useful reading to anyone with an interest in any animal groups, especially vertebrates. There is useful background information here on systematics and taxonomy and forces behind evolutionary change. We also learn of the important role of New Guinea as a staging post for the passerines to spread across the world from an origin in the Southern Hemisphere. ‘Section 3. Thematic chapters’ (pages 319 to 369) and the first of two appendices (on a short earth history) also have useful background information. Chapter 15 on ‘The worldwide variation in biodiversity: some central questions and concepts’ and chapter 16 on ‘How new species evolve’ with their chapter headings, give a clear sign on the many interesting topics that are covered in these chapters. Having lived on islands, discussions on speciation models are of particular interest to me. But even a large continent like Africa has over geological time functioned as a patchwork of ecologically isolated areas or islands which has given rise to a number of endemic animals which are confined to limited areas. Island geography or more generally geographical isolation is not the only factor in speciation and chapter 16 also discusses factors such as song in the speciation process. One thing I would have liked to have seen included is a Geological Time Scale. I printed one off the internet to make it easier for me to follow some of the time scales discussed in various chapters.

    The references in the end sections are extensive (pages 397 to 432) and reinforce the point that this book is a synthesis of the work of over a thousand papers published on passerine molecular phylogenetics. But as the editors note, this is only a stock take of work done so far and further advances will arise from whole genome sequencing. The lack of a good fossil record and other issues in constructing a molecular phylogeny means that the exact placement of some avian families is still uncertain. An example being the Kinglets or Crests (family Regulidae). This is a family I am familiar with as its members include the Goldcrest, a bird I encounter in parks with conifers in London. As with many family accounts, there is an evocative introduction to the family followed by the nitty gritty of molecular phylogenetics. In this case the surprising conclusion is that the placement of the family is still unresolved. All birders have their favourite bird families and will find it easy to be absorbed by the family accounts of their favourite families.

    On the whole it is a remarkable book for its contribution of deep science and insights made accessible to serious birders through good writing and design. I suspect no other group of biological organisms has a cutting edge science book of this genre devoted to it that is aimed at a popular market. The book also casts a light on birders as being a sociological phenomenon. Birders are an economically very valuable group of hobbyists who number in the several hundred thousand and are a subset of a few million birdwatchers world-wide. They generate millions of dollars in revenue for industry sectors from tourism to publishing. But interestingly, probably no other special interest group of this number of adherents follows the outcomes of cutting edge science with such keen interest.

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