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Friday, November 01, 2002 ( 3:46 PM ) hillary I think I might switch back and forth between first-person Hosanna and first-person Mima, with her in-and-out Alzheimer's thoughts. That would be an easier way to tell Chia's story that just through letters or dialogue. # Tuesday, October 29, 2002 ( 6:44 PM ) hillary Sanna is a 2nd grade teacher. Still goes to church regularly. Mima has hair like Randi. Monday, October 28, 2002 ( 8:18 PM ) hillary jargony bits: Impacts of Introduced Avian Diseases on the Fig. 1. Anianiau (Hemignathus parvus) from the Alakai Wilderness Preserve, Kauai. This species is currently restricted to high elevation montane rain forests on Kauai. Like other native honeycreepers, Anianiau are highly susceptible to avian pox and malaria and have disappeared from former low elevation habitats because of mosquito transmitted avian diseases. Fig. 2. Foot lesions caused by avian pox virus. The large swellings caused by the virus make it difficult for birds to perch and forage. Vision may be impaired when lesions occur around the eyes and beak. ancestor: one colonizing species of finch, possibly a Eurasian rosefinch (Carpodacus sp.) or, less likely, the North American house finch (Carpodacus mexicanus) Nectar-feeding honeycreepers evolved dramatically curved bills designed for probing and extracting the nectar from the flowers of Hawaii's endemic lobelias and other plants. Insectivorous honeycreepers developed thin, warbler-like bills for picking insects from the foliage. Seed-eaters developed stouter, stronger bills for cracking tough husks. Some species probed or cracked bark with strong hooked bills seeking wood-boring insects, thereby filling a niche woodpeckers do elsewhere. The 'I'iwi is one of the many species of honeycreepers that Their movements are also unique as they spend much of Abstract: The Hawaiian honeycreepers are a dramatic example of adaptive radiation but contrast with the four other songbird lineages that successfully colonized the Hawaiian archipelago and failed to undergo similar diversification. To explore the processes that produced the diversity dichotomy in this insular fauna, we compared clade age and morphologic diversity between the speciose honeycreepers and the comparatively depauperate Hawaiian thrushes. Mitochondrial-DNA-based genetic distances between these Hawaiian clades and their continental sister taxa indicate that the ancestral thrush colonized the Hawaiian Islands as early as the common ancestor of the honeycreepers. This similar timing of colonization indicates that the marked difference in diversity between the Hawaiian honeycreeper and thrush clades is unlikely to result from differences in these clades' tenures within the archipelago. If time cannot explain the contrasting diversities of these taxa, then an intrinsic, clade-specific trait may have fostered the honeycreeper radiation. Because the honeycreepers have diversified most dramatically in morphological characters related to resource utilization, we used principal components analyses of bill characters to compare the magnitudes of morphological variation in the ancestral clades from which the Hawaiian honeycreeper and thrush lineages are derived, the Carduelini and Turdinae respectively. Although the Carduelini share a more recent common ancestor and have a lower species diversity than the Turdinae, these finch-like relatives of the honeycreepers exhibit significantly greater variation in bill morphology than do the continental relatives of the Hawaiian thrushes. The higher magnitude of morphological variation in the non-Hawaiian Carduelini suggests that the honeycreepers fall within a clade exhibiting a generally high evolutionary flexibility in bill morphology. Accordingly, although the magnitude of bill variation among the honeycreepers is similar to that of the entire passerine radiation, this dramatic morphological radiation represents but an extreme manifestation of a general clade-specific ability to evolve novel morphologies. (http://www.eeb.cornell.edu/lovette/pdf/Myadestes.pdf) ( 8:13 PM ) hillary "Allopatric speciation" "The Hawaiian honeycreepers form an endemic family." I love the idea of an endemic family, one that is rooted in place and just peters out if it is transplanted (peters, ha ha). Telespiza cantans Laysan Finch Hawaiian Honeycreepers (Drepanidae) ( 8:04 PM ) hillary I'll be damned if Honeycreepers aren't finches!! How's that for coincidence? Honeycreeper isn't a bad name for a novel, you know. I already have a title, but I just may change it. Hawaiian Honeycreepers - Family Drepanididae 'I'IWI - Vestiaria coccinea ------------------ The DNA shows that the original honeycreeper rapidly evolved into a large number of species, the descendants of which are still with us today. In some cases, the DNA also documents when a species colonized new Hawaiian islands as they emerged from the sea. Getting back to the `auku`u and the `io, DNA and the molecular clock would say that the heron reached Hawaii in the last few thousand years, and that the hawk arrived about a million years ago. some pictures ( 8:00 PM ) hillary No finches in Malaysia says Judy. Not true, but we will take it as truth, that there are no notable finches in Malaysia. How about Hawaiian Honeycreepers as the object of Pete's affection? The Hawaiian Honeycreepers The Hawaiian Honeycreepers are typified by nectar feeding, their bright colouration and canary-like songs. They are considered one of the finest examples of adaptive radiation, even more diverse than Darwin's Galapagos finches, as a wide array of different species has evolved in all the different niches provided by the Hawaiian archipelago. The book will therefore be of interest to evolutionary biologists and ecologists as well as professional ornithologists and amateur bird watchers. As with the other books in the Bird Family of the World series, the work is divided into two main sections. Part one is an overview of the Hawaiian Honeycreeper evolution and natural history and Part two comprises accounts of each species. The author has produced his own outstanding illustrations of these birds to accompany his text. ( 11:03 AM ) hillary The squirrel story re: Jack # |
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