Landscape and Climatic Variations Shaped Secondary Contacts amid Barn Owls of the Western Palearctic

Author:

Cumer Tristan1ORCID,Machado Ana Paula1ORCID,Dumont Guillaume1,Bontzorlos Vasileios23,Ceccherelli Renato4ORCID,Charter Motti56ORCID,Dichmann Klaus7,Kassinis Nicolaos8ORCID,Lourenço Rui9ORCID,Manzia Francesca10,Martens Hans-Dieter11,Prévost Laure12,Rakovic Marko13ORCID,Roque Inês9,Siverio Felipe14ORCID,Roulin Alexandre1ORCID,Goudet Jérôme115ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland

2. Green Fund, Kifisia, Athens, Greece

3. “TYTO”—Organization for the Management and Conservation of Biodiversity in Agricultural Ecosystems, Larisa, Greece

4. Centro Recupero Rapaci del Mugello, Firenze, Italy

5. Shamir Research Institute, University of Haifa, Katzrin, Israel

6. Department of Geography and Environmental Sciences, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel

7. Sønderborg, Denmark

8. Game and Fauna Service, Ministry of the Interior, Nicosia, Cyprus

9. Laboratory of Ornithology, MED Mediterranean Institute for Agriculture, Environment and Development, IIFA, University of Évora, Évora, Portugal

10. Centro di Recupero per la Fauna Selvatica–LIPU, Rome, Italy

11. Neuwittenbek, Germany

12. Association C.H.E.N.E., Centre d’Hébergement et d’Etude sur la Nature et l’Environnement, Allouville-Bellefosse, France

13. Natural History Museum of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia

14. Canary Islands’ Ornithology and Natural History Group (GOHNIC), Buenavista del Norte, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain

15. Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, Lausanne, Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract The combined actions of climatic variations and landscape barriers shape the history of natural populations. When organisms follow their shifting niches, obstacles in the landscape can lead to the splitting of populations, on which evolution will then act independently. When two such populations are reunited, secondary contact occurs in a broad range of admixture patterns, from narrow hybrid zones to the complete dissolution of lineages. A previous study suggested that barn owls colonized the Western Palearctic after the last glaciation in a ring-like fashion around the Mediterranean Sea, and conjectured an admixture zone in the Balkans. Here, we take advantage of whole-genome sequences of 94 individuals across the Western Palearctic to reveal the complex history of the species in the region using observational and modeling approaches. Even though our results confirm that two distinct lineages colonized the region, one in Europe and one in the Levant, they suggest that it predates the last glaciation and identify a secondary contact zone between the two in Anatolia. We also show that barn owls recolonized Europe after the glaciation from two distinct glacial refugia: a previously identified western one in Iberia and a new eastern one in Italy. Both glacial lineages now communicate via eastern Europe, in a wide and permeable contact zone. This complex history of populations enlightens the taxonomy of Tyto alba in the region, highlights the key role played by mountain ranges and large water bodies as barriers and illustrates the power of population genomics in uncovering intricate demographic patterns.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference81 articles.

1. Genomic divergence in a ring species complex;Alcaide;Nature,2014

2. Phylogeny, biogeography, and diversification of barn owls (Aves: Strigiformes);Aliabadian;Biol J Linn Soc,2016

3. Local adaptation maintains clinal variation in melanin-based coloration of European barn owls (Tyto alba);Antoniazza;Evolution,2010

4. Natural selection in a postglacial range expansion: the case of the colour cline in the European barn owl;Antoniazza;Mol Ecol,2014

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