Affiliation:
1. School of Biological Sciences University of East Anglia Norfolk UK
2. Terrestrial Ecology Unit, Biology Department Ghent University Ghent Belgium
3. School of Biological Sciences The University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK
4. Department of Biology, Edward Grey Institute of Field Ornithology University of Oxford Oxford UK
5. Biodiversity Research Institute (CSIC‐Oviedo University‐Principality of Asturias) University of Oviedo Mieres Asturias Spain
6. Department of Organismal Biology – Systematic Biology, Evolutionary Biology Centre (EBC), Science for Life Laboratory Uppsala University Uppsala Sweden
Abstract
AbstractWhen populations colonise new environments, they may be exposed to novel selection pressures but also suffer from extensive genetic drift due to founder effects, small population sizes and limited interpopulation gene flow. Genomic approaches enable us to study how these factors drive divergence, and disentangle neutral effects from differentiation at specific loci due to selection. Here, we investigate patterns of genetic diversity and divergence using whole‐genome resequencing (>22× coverage) in Berthelot's pipit (Anthus berthelotii), a passerine endemic to the islands of three north Atlantic archipelagos. Strong environmental gradients, including in pathogen pressure, across populations in the species range, make it an excellent system in which to explore traits important in adaptation and/or incipient speciation. First, we quantify how genomic divergence accumulates across the speciation continuum, that is, among Berthelot's pipit populations, between sub species across archipelagos, and between Berthelot's pipit and its mainland ancestor, the tawny pipit (Anthus campestris). Across these colonisation timeframes (2.1 million–ca. 8000 years ago), we identify highly differentiated loci within genomic islands of divergence and conclude that the observed distributions align with expectations for non‐neutral divergence. Characteristic signatures of selection are identified in loci associated with craniofacial/bone and eye development, metabolism and immune response between population comparisons. Interestingly, we find limited evidence for repeated divergence of the same loci across the colonisation range but do identify different loci putatively associated with the same biological traits in different populations, likely due to parallel adaptation. Incipient speciation across these island populations, in which founder effects and selective pressures are strong, may therefore be repeatedly associated with morphology, metabolism and immune defence.
Funder
Natural Environment Research Council
European Regional Development Fund
Cited by
1 articles.
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