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“Early Bird” Project Really Gets the Worm:
LSU Researchers Help Decode Evolutionary History of Birds

Researchers from LSU’s internationally renowned Museum of Natural Science recently took part in an extensive research project studying the evolutionary history of birds – a project so large and so comprehensive that textbooks will be rewritten in its wake.

This study – the largest study of bird genetics ever completed – has not only shaken up the avian evolutionary tree, but completely redrawn it. The results of this massive research project, which relied heavily upon the LSU MNS genetic resources collection, were published in Science on June 27.

The findings are so broad that the scientific names of dozens of birds will have to be changed, and biology textbooks and birdwatchers’ field guides will have to be revised.

LSU participants in the study include: Fred Sheldon, director of the LSU MNS; Ben Marks, recent graduate of LSU’s biological sciences doctoral program; and Chris Witt, former LSU graduate student and current assistant professor in the Department of Biology and Museum of Southwestern Biology at the University of New Mexico.

For more than five years, the Early Bird Project, funded by the National Science Foundation’s “Assembling the Tree-of-Life” research program, has been collecting DNA sequence data from all major living groups of birds.

“One thing that makes this project unique is its breadth; both in its taxonomic scope and in terms of the amount and type of data we collected,” said Marks.

Thus far, scientists have built and analyzed a dataset of more than 32 kilobases of nuclear DNA sequences from 19 different locations on the DNA of each of 169 bird species.

This paper makes tremendous strides toward determining the evolutionary relationships of the major branches in the bird family tree,” said Witt. “It uses DNA sequences to infer key events in the diversification of birds that happened tens of millions of years ago.”
For example, we now know that:

The other co-authors of this study include scientists from the Field Museum in Chicago; the University of Florida; University of California, Berkeley; Smithsonian Institution; Stellenbosch University (South Africa); University of Maryland; Wayne State University; and the University of New Mexico. More than half of the people who worked on or trained in this project were women.

There are an estimated 82 million birdwatchers in the United States alone, making it the country’s second most popular hobby, surpassed only by gardening. Therefore, interest in the results of the Early Bird research project will be far reaching.

Both Marks and Witt agree that being a graduate student at LSU afforded them a special opportunity to be involved in cutting-edge research.

“Being associated with LSU is the gold standard in ornithology,” said Witt. “The LSU affiliation provides a huge boost to the career prospects of alumni like me.”

Ashley Berthelot | LSU Office of Public Affairs
Summer 2008


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