4.7 Article

A comparison of genomic islands of differentiation across three young avian species pairs

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 23, Pages 4839-4855

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.14858

Keywords

genomic differentiation; hybridization; islands of differentiation; Parulidae; speciation; warbler

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [311931]

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Detailed evaluations of genomic variation between sister species often reveal distinct chromosomal regions of high relative differentiation (i.e., islands of differentiation in F-ST), but there is much debate regarding the causes of this pattern. We briefly review the prominent models of genomic islands of differentiation and compare patterns of genomic differentiation in three closely related pairs of New World warblers with the goal of evaluating support for the four models. Each pair (MacGillivray's/mourning warblers; Townsend's/black-throated green warblers; and Audubon's/myrtle warblers) consists of forms that were likely separated in western and eastern North American refugia during cycles of Pleistocene glaciations and have now come into contact in western Canada, where each forms a narrow hybrid zone. We show strong differences between pairs in their patterns of genomic heterogeneity in F-ST, suggesting differing selective forces and/or differing genomic responses to similar selective forces among the three pairs. Across most of the genome, levels of within-group nucleotide diversity (pi(Within)) are almost as large as levels of between-group nucleotide distance (pi(Between)) within each pair, suggesting recent common ancestry and/or gene flow. In two pairs, a pattern of the F-ST peaks having low pi(Between) suggests that selective sweeps spread between geographically differentiated groups, followed by local differentiation. This sweep-before-differentiation model is consistent with signatures of gene flow within the yellow-rumped warbler species complex. These findings add to our growing understanding of speciation as a complex process that can involve phases of adaptive introgression among partially differentiated populations.

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