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Diving birds like puffins are highly adapted for their environment, but that means they can't adapt so well to changing conditions. Photo Credit: Michael Blum |
Diving birds like penguins, puffins and cormorants may be more prone to extinction than non-diving birds, according to a new study by the Milner Centre for Evolution at the University of Bath. The authors suggest this is because they are highly specialized and therefore less able to adapt to changing environments than other birds.
The ability to dive is quite rare in birds, with less than a third of the 727 species of water bird using this way of hunting for food.
Evolutionary scientists Joshua Tyler and Dr Jane Younger studied of the evolution of diving in modern waterbirds to investigate how diving impacted: the physical characteristics of the birds (morphology); how the species evolved to increase diversity (rate of speciation); and how prone the species were to extinction.
The study, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, found that diving evolved independently 14 times, and that once a group had evolved the ability to dive, subsequent evolution didn’t reverse this trait.
The researchers found that body size amongst the diving birds had evolved differently depending on the type of diving they did.