Mapping seasonal migration in a songbird hybrid zone -- heritability, genetic correlations, and genomic patterns linked to speciation

Author:

Justen Hannah C.1,Easton Wendy E.2,Delmore Kira E.1

Affiliation:

1. Biology Department, Texas Agricultural and Mechanical University, TAMU College Station, TX 3528

2. Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canadian Wildlife Service-Pacific Region, Delta, BC V4K 3N2, Canada

Abstract

Seasonal migration is a widespread behavior relevant for adaptation and speciation, yet knowledge of its genetic basis is limited. We leveraged advances in tracking and sequencing technologies to bridge this gap in a well-characterized hybrid zone between songbirds that differ in migratory behavior. Migration requires the coordinated action of many traits, including orientation, timing, and wing morphology. We used genetic mapping to show these traits are highly heritable and genetically correlated, explaining how migration has evolved so rapidly in the past and suggesting future responses to climate change may be possible. Many of these traits mapped to the same genomic regions and small structural variants indicating the same, or tightly linked, genes underlie them. Analyses integrating transcriptomic data indicate cholinergic receptors could control multiple traits. Furthermore, analyses integrating genomic differentiation further suggested genes underlying migratory traits help maintain reproductive isolation in this hybrid zone.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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