Title: Evolution of breeding plumages in birds: A multiple-step pathway
to seasonal dichromatism in New World Warblers (Aves: Parulidae)
Abstract
Bird feathers serve multiple functions through their physical structure
and coloration, but the evolution of functional novelty in bird feathers
remains poorly understood. We investigated how selective pressures gave
rise to seasonal coloration change in the feathers of the New World
Warblers (Aves: Parulidae), a family with a remarkable diversity of
plumage, molt, and life history strategies. Seasonal color changes in
the plumages of migratory warblers are hypothesized to reflect a
tradeoff between natural and sexual selection on the breeding and
non-breeding distributions. We used comparative methods including
phylogenetic path analysis to examine nested hypotheses relating to the
evolution of seasonal dichromatism (i.e. breeding and nonbreeding
plumages) and the molts that produce these plumages. We found that
biannual molts likely evolved in response to increased feather wear and
that changes in feather coloration evolved after the biannual molt
itself. These results demonstrate that structural needs, not seasonal
selection on coloration, drive the evolution of molt strategies in
Parulidae. Importantly, once a biannual molt evolves, it served as a
preadaptation for seasonal changes in plumage color. These results
reveal how life history strategies act upon multiple and separate
feather functions to drive the evolution of feather replacement patterns
and bird coloration.