ADAPTIVE RADIATION 221
Scratch
for seeds
on the
ground
Feed on
seeds on the
ground and
the flowers and
pulp of Prickly
Pear(Opuntia)
Feed in trees
on beetles
use spines held
in the bill to
extract insects
from bark
crevices
Feed on leaves,
buds, and seeds
in the canopy of
trees
Warbler-like birds
feeding on small
soft insects
Ce. olicacea
Ce. fusca
P. crassirostris
C. pauper
G. fortis
G. fuliginosa14 g
20 g
34 g
21 g
28 g
18 g
21 g
34 g
13 g
10 g
(b)
8 g
20 g
20 g
13 g
G. magnirostris
G. scandens
G. conirostris
G. difficilis
C. parvulus
C. psittacula
C. pallida
Pi. inornata
Figure 9.5(b) Darwin’s finches, the Emberizinae, are endemic to these islands. There are a number of different phylogenetic hypotheses of how
these taxa relate to each other. The genetic distance between each species is shown by the length of the horizontal lines. The maximum amount
of black colouring in the male plumage and the average body mass are shown for each species. This version is taken from Townsendet al. (2003)
after Petren et al. (1999).
A comprehensive theory for this radiation was
developed by Lack (1947a) and has been updated
and summarized by Grant (1981, 1984; and see
Vincek et al. 1997). The key points are as follows.
One of the Galápagos islands was colonized from
the mainland in a one-off founding event. Genetic
analyses suggest that the effective population size of
the founding flock was at least 30 individuals
(Vincek et al. 1997). The founding population
expanded quite rapidly, undergoing selective
changes and/or drift. After some time, members of
this population colonized another island in the
archipelago, where conditions were slightly different.
Further changes occurred through a combination of