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Bird Taxonomy and Nomenclature
Arremon
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<blockquote data-quote="l_raty" data-source="post: 3317700" data-attributes="member: 24811"><p>The same two haplogroups can be seen in the BOLD barcode database. One is present in specimens from the provinces of Darién, Panamá, and westwards to the province of Veraguas; the other in specimens from Tabasco in México, the province of Bocas del Toro, and eastwards to the province of Colón (where Achiote, the origin of López et al's samples, is located).</p><p>Veraguas is significantly farther W than Colón: this suggests both haplogroups may coexist over a zone that is at least a good 100km-wide.</p><p></p><p>A single bird from Perú (Amazonas) looks still more divergent.</p><p></p><p>(I've attached ID trees produced by submitting the cox1 sequences of the two mitogenomes published by López et al to the <a href="http://boldsystems.org/index.php/IDS_OpenIdEngine" target="_blank">BOLD ID engine</a>.)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="l_raty, post: 3317700, member: 24811"] The same two haplogroups can be seen in the BOLD barcode database. One is present in specimens from the provinces of Darién, Panamá, and westwards to the province of Veraguas; the other in specimens from Tabasco in México, the province of Bocas del Toro, and eastwards to the province of Colón (where Achiote, the origin of López et al's samples, is located). Veraguas is significantly farther W than Colón: this suggests both haplogroups may coexist over a zone that is at least a good 100km-wide. A single bird from Perú (Amazonas) looks still more divergent. (I've attached ID trees produced by submitting the cox1 sequences of the two mitogenomes published by López et al to the [URL="http://boldsystems.org/index.php/IDS_OpenIdEngine"]BOLD ID engine[/URL].) [/QUOTE]
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Bird Taxonomy and Nomenclature
Arremon
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