GALLIFORMES

Dyke, Gareth J., Gulas, Bonnie E. & Crowe, Timothy M., 2003, Suprageneric relationships of galliform birds (Aves, Galliformes): a cladistic analysis of morphological characters, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 137 (2), pp. 227-244 : 230

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1046/j.1096-3642.2003.00048.x

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7C7D1C02-4E13-FF86-FC2F-FF13C10E9273

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Carolina

scientific name

GALLIFORMES
status

 

RELATIONSHIPS WITHIN GALLIFORMES View in CoL

Phylogenetic analysis of the complete data-set (61 terminal taxa [not including the two members of the

Anatidae included in the matrix, Anas and Dendrocygna ]; 102 characters; Appendix 2) using parsimony resulted in the production of 1700 trees, each 612

steps in length ( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ). Based on these trees and their strict component consensus representation ( Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ),

the following groupings are supported by the analysis:

(1) Galliformes are a monophyletic group with respect to Anseriformes .

(2) A monophyletic Megapodiidae (e.g. Macrocephalon , Alectura , Megapodius ) is the sister-group to all other Galliformes .

(3) A monophyletic Cracidae (e.g. Ortalis , Penelope , Aburria , Crax , Nothocrax ) is the sister-group to the ‘phasianoids’ (to the exclusion of the Megapodiidae ).

(4) All other phasianoid Galliformes form a monophyletic group with respect to the two, more basal clades Megapodiidae and Cracidae .

(5) The traditional grouping of guineafowl ( Numididae ) is the most basal taxon within the phasianoid Galliformes , although monophyly of these birds is not strictly supported on the basis of the morphological characters employed.

(6) New and Old World quails (i.e. Magaroperdix, Perdix , Coturnix ) form a monophyletic group with respect to other phasianoid taxa.

(7) The remaining Galliformes (including grouse, partridges, pheasants, turkeys, peafowl, tragopans and francolins) comprise a number of smaller clades that are successive sister-taxa with respect to the quails ( Figs 2 View Figure 2 , 3 View Figure 3 ).

All of these groupings are well supported on the basis of both the morphological character evidence and relevant support statistics.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Aves

Order

Galliformes

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