Human-Induced Range Expansions Result in a Recent Hybrid Zone between Sister Species of Ducks

Author:

Lavretsky Philip1ORCID,Kraai Kevin J.2,Butler David3,Morel James3,VonBank Jay A.4,Marty Joseph R.5,Musni Vergie M.1,Collins Daniel P.6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX 79668, USA

2. Waterfowl Program, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Canyon, TX 79015, USA

3. Central Coast Wetland Ecosystem Project, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Bay City, TX 77414, USA

4. Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Jamestown, ND 58401, USA

5. Southwest Region—Texas Chenier Plain NWR Complex, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Anahuac, TX 77514, USA

6. Southwest Region—Migratory Bird Program, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Albuquerque, NM 87103, USA

Abstract

Landscapes are consistently under pressure from human-induced ecological change, often resulting in shifting species distributions. For some species, changing the geographical breadth of their niche space results in matching range shifts to regions other than those in which they are formally found. In this study, we employ a population genomics approach to assess potential conservation issues arising from purported range expansions into the south Texas Brush Country of two sister species of ducks: mottled (Anas fulvigula) and Mexican (Anas diazi) ducks. Specifically, despite being non-migratory, both species are increasingly being recorded outside their formal ranges, with the northeastward and westward expansions of Mexican and mottled ducks, respectively, perhaps resulting in secondary contact today. We assessed genetic ancestry using thousands of autosomal loci across the ranges of both species, as well as sampled Mexican- and mottled-like ducks from across overlapping regions of south Texas. First, we confirm that both species are indeed expanding their ranges, with genetically pure Western Gulf Coast mottled ducks confirmed as far west as La Salle county, Texas, while Mexican ducks recorded across Texas counties near the USA–Mexico border. Importantly, the first confirmed Mexican × mottled duck hybrids were found in between these regions, which likely represents a recently established contact zone that is, on average, ~100 km wide. We posit that climate- and land use-associated changes, including coastal habitat degradation coupled with increases in artificial habitats in the interior regions of Texas, are facilitating these range expansions. Consequently, continued monitoring of this recent contact event can serve to understand species’ responses in the Anthropocene, but it can also be used to revise operational survey areas for mottled ducks.

Funder

Texas Parks and Wildlife, the National Science Foundation

U.S. Geological Survey

Publisher

MDPI AG

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