Kerryn Slack
Doctor of Philosophy, (Genetics)
Study Completed: 2012
College of Sciences
Citation
Thesis Title
Avian Phylogeny and & Divergence Times based on Mitogenomic Sequences
Read article at Massey Research Online:
Ms Slack used complete mitochondrial genomes to study the evolutionary relationships of modern birds. Her studies strongly reinforce the idea that the ratites (including moa and kiwi) form the first divergence among birds, and that the second branch consists of land and water fowl (e.g. chickens and ducks etc).) The combination of molecular data with well-supported calibration times from good fossil data (for example, penguin fossils from North Canterbury) allows strong estimates of the divergence times of the major avian groups. This places the main divergences in the Cretaceous, well before the asteroid impact that marks the end of this period. Ms Slack鈥檚 work strongly indicates that external factors are not required to 鈥榙rive鈥 macroevolution, normal evolutionary processes are sufficient.
Supervisors
Distinguished Professor David Penny
Professor Peter Lockhart
Professor U Arnason
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Last updated on Monday 04 April 2022