Genomic diversity and differentiation between island and mainland populations of white‐tailed eagles (Haliaeetus albicilla)

Author:

Hansen Charles Christian Riis1ORCID,Láruson Áki Jarl1ORCID,Rasmussen Jacob Agerbo23,Ballesteros Jesus Adrian Chimal24,Sinding Mikkel‐Holger S.35ORCID,Hallgrimsson Gunnar T.1,von Schmalensee Menja6,Stefansson Robert A.6,Skarphédinsson Kristinn Haukur7,Labansen Aili Lage8,Leivits Madis9,Sonne Christian10,Dietz Rune10,Skelmose Kim11,Boertmann David10,Eulaers Igor10,Martin Michael D.2,Helgason Agnar S.1213,Gilbert M. Thomas P.23,Pálsson Snæbjörn1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Life and Environmental Sciences University of Iceland Reykjavik Iceland

2. Department of Natural History NTNU University Museum Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) Trondheim Norway

3. Center for Evolutionary Hologenomics The Globe Institute Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

4. Natural History Museum University of Oslo Oslo Norway

5. Department of Biology University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

6. West‐Iceland Nature Research Centre Stykkisholmur Iceland

7. Icelandic Institute of Natural History Garðabær Iceland

8. Greenland Institute of Natural Resources Nuuk Greenland

9. Institute of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Sciences Estonian University of Life Sciences Tartu Estonia

10. Department of Ecoscience Aarhus University Roskilde Denmark

11. Natural History Museum of Denmark University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

12. Department of Anthropology University of Iceland Reykjavik Iceland

13. deCODE Genetics Reykjavik Iceland

Abstract

AbstractDivergence in the face of high dispersal capabilities is a documented but poorly understood phenomenon. The white‐tailed eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla) has a large geographic dispersal capability and should theoretically be able to maintain genetic homogeneity across its dispersal range. However, following analysis of the genomic variation of white‐tailed eagles, from both historical and contemporary samples, clear signatures of ancient biogeographic substructure across Europe and the North‐East Atlantic is observed. The greatest genomic differentiation was observed between island (Greenland and Iceland) and mainland (Denmark, Norway and Estonia) populations. The two island populations share a common ancestry from a single mainland population, distinct from the other sampled mainland populations, and despite the potential for high connectivity between Iceland and Greenland they are well separated from each other and are characterized by inbreeding and little variation. Temporal differences also highlight a pattern of regional populations persisting despite the potential for admixture. All sampled populations generally showed a decline in effective population size over time, which may have been shaped by four historical events: (1) Isolation of refugia during the last glacial period 110–115,000 years ago, (2) population divergence following the colonization of the deglaciated areas ~10,000 years ago, (3) human population expansion, which led to the settlement in Iceland ~1100 years ago, and (4) human persecution and exposure to toxic pollutants during the last two centuries.

Funder

Icelandic Centre for Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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