Discover

ANAS


'''Anas''' is a genus of dabbling ducks. It includes mallards, wigeons, teals, pintails and shovelers in a number of subgenera. Some authorities prefer to elevate the subgenera to genus rank (Carboneras 1992). Indeed, as the moa-nalos are very close to this clade and may have evolved later than some of these lineages, it is rather the absence of a thorough review than lack of necessity that this genus is rather over-lumped.

Contents
Systematics
References

Systematics


The phylogeny of this genus is one of the most confounded ones of all living birds. Research is hampered by the fact the radiation of the two major groups of ''Anas'' — the teals and mallard groups — took place in a very short time and fairly recently, roughly in the mid-late Pleistocene. Furthermore, hybridization probably has long played a major role in ''Anas'' evolution, with within-subgenus hybrids regularly and between-subgenus hybrids not infrequently being fully fertile (Carboneras 1992; ''see also'' Mariana Mallard). The relationships between species are much obscured by this fact, and mtDNA sequence data is of dubious value in resolving their relationships (e.g. Kulikova ''et al.'' 2005); on the other hand, nuclear DNA sequences evolve too slowly to resolve the phylogeny of the subgenus ''Anas'' for example.
Some major clades can be discerned. For example, that the traditional subgenus ''Anas'', the mallard group, forms a monophyletic (in the loose sense, i.e. non-holophyletic) group has never been seriously questioned by modern science and is as good as confirmed (but see below). On the other hand, the phylogeny of the teals is very confusing.
It is fairly clear by now that the dabbling duck lineages more distantly related to mallard group (which includes the type species of ''Anas'') than the wigeons are should be separated in their own genera. These would include the Baikal Teal, the Garganey, the spotted black-capped ''Punanetta'' group, and the shovelers and other blue-winged species. Whether the widgeons, which are very distinct in morphology (Livezey 1991) and behavior (Johnson ''et al.'' 2000), but much less so in mtDNA cytochrome ''b'' and NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2 sequences (Johnson & Sorenson 1999), should also be considered a distinct genus (including the Gadwall and Falcated Duck) is essentially the one remaining point of dispute as regards the question which taxa should remain in this genus and which ones should not.
The following arrangement is based on morphological (Livezey 1991), molecular (Johnson & Sorenson 1999, McCracken ''et al.'' 2001) and behavioral (Johnson ''et al.'' 2000) characters and presents apparent major evolutionary groupings compared to the subgenera the species were placed in at one time or another.
The puzzling Baikal Teal (''Anas formosa'', male)

Probable genus 'N.N.'

Baikal Teal, ''Anas formosa'' (formerly in ''Nettion'')
Probable genus '''Querquedula''' - Garganey (may include ''Punanetta'')

Garganey, ''Anas querquedula''
Probable genus '''Punanetta'''

Silver Teal, ''Anas versicolor''

Puna Teal, ''Anas puna'' - formerly included in ''Anas versicolor''

Hottentot Teal, ''Anas hottentota''
Red Shoveler, ''Anas platalea''

Probable genus '''Spatula''' - blue-winged ducks/shovelers and allies (polyphyletic?)

Blue-winged Teal, ''Anas discors''

Cinnamon Teal, ''Anas cyanoptera''


★ Borrero's Cinnamon Teal, ''Anas cyanoptera borreroi'' - possibly extinct (late 20th century?)

Red Shoveler, ''Anas platalea''

Cape Shoveler, ''Anas smithii''

Australasian Shoveler, ''Anas rhynchotis''

Northern Shoveler, ''Anas clypeata''
Male American Wigeon, ''Anas americana''

Possible genus '''Mareca''' - wigeons (may include ''Chaulelasmus'' and ''Eunetta'')

Eurasian Wigeon, ''Anas penelope''

Amsterdam Island Duck, ''Anas marecula'' - tentatively placed here; extinct (c.1800)

American Wigeon, ''Anas americana''

Chiloe Wigeon, ''Anas sibilatrix''
Subgenus '''Chaulelasmus''' - Gadwall

Gadwall, ''Anas strepera''


Washington Island Gadwall, ''Anas strepera couesi'' - extinct (c.1880s)
Subgenus '''Eunetta''' - Falcated Duck

Falcated Duck, ''Anas falcata''
Subgenus '''Dafila''' - pintails

Northern Pintail, ''Anas acuta''

Eaton's Pintail, ''Anas eatoni''


★ Kerguelen Islands Pintail, ''Anas eatoni eatoni''


★ Crozet Islands Pintail, ''Anas eatoni drygalskii''

Yellow-billed Pintail, ''Anas georgica''


South Georgia Pintail, ''Anas georgica georgica''
Male Northern Pintail, ''Anas acuta''



★ Niceforo's Pintail, ''Anas georgica niceforoi'' - extinct (1950s)

White-cheeked Pintail, ''Anas bahamensis'' (formerly ''Poecilonetta'')

Red-billed Teal, ''Anas erythrorhyncha'' (formerly ''Poecilonetta'')

Cape Teal, ''Anas capensis'' (formerly in ''Nettion'')
Subgenus '''Nettion''' - teals (paraphyletic)

★ Indian Ocean clade


Bernier's Teal, ''Anas bernieri''


Mauritian Duck, ''Anas theodori'' - extinct (late 1690s)


Sunda Teal, ''Anas gibberifrons''



★ Rennell Island Teal, ''Anas gibberifrons remissa'' - extinct (c.1959)


Grey Teal, ''Anas gracilis'' - formerly included in ''Anas gibberifrons''


Chestnut Teal, ''Anas castanea''
Green-winged Teal, ''Anas carolinensis''


★ Green-winged/Red-and-green head clade


Common Teal, ''Anas crecca''


Green-winged Teal, ''Anas carolinensis'' - formerly included in ''Anas crecca''


Speckled Teal, ''Anas flavirostris''



★ Andean Teal, ''Anas (flavirostris) andinum''

★ New Zealand clade (Placement unresolved)


Auckland Islands Teal, ''Anas aucklandica''


Brown Teal, ''Anas chlorotis'' - formerly included in ''Anas aucklandica''


★ Macquarie Islands Teal, ''Anas'' cf. ''chlorotis'' - prehistoric


Campbell Island Teal, ''Anas nesiotis'' - formerly included in ''Anas aucklandica''
Subgenus '''Melananas''' - African Black Duck

African Black Duck, ''Anas sparsa''
Yellow-billed Duck, ''Anas undulata''

Subgenus '''Anas''' - mallard and relatives (may include ''Melananas'')

★ Basal African species ("''Afranas''")


Meller's Duck, ''Anas melleri''


Yellow-billed Duck, ''Anas undulata''
The last male Mariana Mallard, c.1980


★ American clade


Mottled Duck, ''Anas fulvigula'' - sometimes included in ''Anas platyrhynchos''



★ Florida Duck, ''Anas fulvigula fulvigula'' - sometimes included in ''Anas platyrhynchos''


American Black Duck, ''Anas rubripes'' - sometimes included in ''Anas platyrhynchos''


Mexican Duck, ''Anas diazi'' - sometimes included in ''Anas platyrhynchos''

★ Pacific clade - the moa-nalos might be derived from this group.


Mariana Mallard, ''Anas (platyrhynchos) oustaleti'' - sometimes considered a subspecies of ''Anas superciliosa''; extinct (1981)


Hawaiian Duck, ''Anas wyvilliana'' - sometimes included in ''Anas platyrhynchos''


Philippine Duck, ''Anas luzonica''


Laysan Duck, ''Anas laysanensis'' - sometimes included in ''Anas platyrhynchos''



★ Lisianski Duck, ''Anas'' cf. ''laysanensis'' - hypothetical; extinct (c.1845)


Pacific Black Duck, ''Anas superciliosa''

★ Ambiguous


Mallard, ''Anas platyrhynchos''


Spotbill, ''Anas poecilorhyncha''



★ Chinese Spotbill, ''Anas (poecilorhyncha) zonorhyncha'' - sometimes considered a subspecies of ''Anas superciliosa''
'Formerly placed in ''Anas''':

Bronze-winged Duck, ''Speculanas specularis''

Crested Duck, ''Lophonetta specularioides''

Salvadori's Teal, ''Salvadorina waigiuensis''
A number of 'fossil species' of ''Anas'' have been described. Their relationships are often undetermined:

★ ''Anas velox'' (Middle - Late? Miocene of C Europe) - ''Nettion'' red-and-green head clade?

★ ''Anas isarensis'' (Late Miocene of Aumeister, Germany)

★ ''Anas'' sp. (Late Miocene of Rudabánya, Hungary: Bernor ''et al.'' 2002) - mid-sized species

★ ''Anas greeni'' (Ash Hollow Late Miocene?/Early Pliocene of South Dakota, USA) - ''Nettion'' red-and-green head clade (doubtful)?

★ ''Anas ogallalae'' (Ogalalla Late Miocene?/Early Pliocene of Kansas, USA) - ''Nettion'' red-and-green head clade (doubtful)?

★ ''Anas pullulans'' (Juntura Late Miocene?/Early Pliocene of Juntura, USA) - ''Punanetta''?

★ ''Anas eppelsheimensis'' (Early Pliocene of Eppelsheim, Germany) - ''Nettion'' red-and-green head clade?

★ ''Anas cheuen'' (Early-Middle Pleistocene of Argentina) - ''Dafila''?

★ ''Anas bunkeri'' (Early -? Middle Pliocene - Early Pleistocene of WC USA) - ''Nettion'' red-and-green head clade?

★ ''Anas pachyscelus'' (Shore Hills Late Pleistocene of Bermuda, W Atlantic)

★ ''Anas schneideri'' (Late Pleistocene of Little Box Elder Cave, USA)
Highly problematic, albeit in a theoretical sense, is the placement of the moa-nalos. These are in all probability derived from a common ancestor of the Pacific Black Duck, the Laysan Duck, and the Mallard, and an unknown amount of other lineages. Phylogenetically, they may form a clade with the traditional genus ''Anas'' (Sorenson 1999). However, as opposed to these species - which are well representative of dabbling ducks in general - the moa-nalos are the most radical departure from the anseriform bauplan known to science. This illustrates that in a truly evolutionary sense, a strictly phylogenetic taxonomy may not always be desirable.

References



★ 'Bernor', R.L.; Kordos, L. & Rook, L. (eds): Recent Advances on Multidisciplinary Research at Rudabánya, Late Miocene (MN9), Hungary: A compendium. ''Paleontographica Italiana'' '89': 3-36. PDF fulltext

★ 'Carboneras', Carles (1992): Family Anatidae (Ducks, Geese and Swans). ''In:'' del Hoyo, Josep; Elliott, Andrew & Sargatal, Jordi (editors): ''Handbook of Birds of the World, Volume 1: Ostrich to Ducks'': 536-629. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona. ISBN 84-87334-10-5

★ 'Johnson', Kevin P. & 'Sorenson', Michael D. (1999): Phylogeny and biogeography of dabbling ducks (genus Anas): a comparison of molecular and morphological evidence. ''Auk'' '116'(3): 792–805. PDF fulltext

★ 'Johnson', Kevin P. McKinney, Frank; Wilson, Robert & Sorenson, Michael D. (2000): The evolution of postcopulatory displays in dabbling ducks (Anatini): a phylogenetic perspective. ''Animal Behaviour'' '59'(5): 953–963 PDF fulltext

★ 'Kulikova', Irina V.; Drovetski, S. V.; Gibson, D. D.; Harrigan, R. J.; Rohwer, S.; Sorenson, Michael D.; Winker, K.; Zhuravlev, Yury N. & McCracken, Kevin G. (2005): Phylogeography of the Mallard (''Anas platyrhynchos''): Hybridization, dispersal, and lineage sorting contribute to complex geographic structure. ''Auk'' '122'(3): 949-965. [English with Russian abstract] DOI: 10.1642/0004-8038(2005)122[0949:POTMAP]2.0.CO;2 PDF fulltext 'Erratum': ''Auk'' '122'(4): 1309. DOI: 10.1642/0004-8038(2005)122[0949:POTMAP]2.0.CO;2

★ 'Livezey', B. C. (1991): A phylogenetic analysis and classification of recent dabbling ducks (Tribe Anatini) based on comparative morphology. ''Auk'' '108'(3): 471–507. PDF fulltext

★ 'McCracken', Kevin G.; Johnson, William P. & Sheldon, Frederick H. (2001): Molecular population genetics, phylogeography, and conservation biology of the mottled duck (''Anas fulvigula''). ''Conservation Genetics'' '2'(2): 87–102. PDF fulltext

★ 'Sorenson' ''et al'' (1999): Relationships of the extinct moa-nalos, flightless Hawaiian waterfowl, based on ancient DNA. ''Proceedings of the Royal Society''.

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves
Anas Companies
Below is the list of travel companies in Anas we have in our travel directory