4.7 Article

Sequential colonization of oceanic archipelagos led to a species-level radiation in the common chaffinch complex (Aves: Fringilla coelebs)

Journal

MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION
Volume 164, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2021.107291

Keywords

Islands; Phylogenomics; Phylogeography; Speciation; Species delimitation; Systematics

Funding

  1. Spain's Ministry of Science grants [CGL2015-66381P, PGC-2018-098897-B-I00, PGC2018-097575-B-I00]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture, and Sport [FPU16/05724]
  3. GRUPIN research grant from the Regional Government of Asturias [IDI/2018/000151]

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This study used phylogenomics and genetic diversity patterns to infer the colonization sequence and timing of mainland common chaffinches to Macaronesia, and assessed whether colonization of different archipelagos led to a species-level radiation. Results revealed a rapid radiation of common chaffinches across Macaronesia, driven by sequential colonization of different archipelagos, resulting in genetically distinct, independent evolutionary lineages.
Oceanic archipelagos are excellent systems for studying speciation, yet inference of evolutionary process requires that the colonization history of island organisms be known with accuracy. Here, we used phylogenomics and patterns of genetic diversity to infer the sequence and timing of colonization of Macaronesia by mainland common chaffinches (Fringilla coelebs), and assessed whether colonization of the different archipelagos has resulted in a species-level radiation. To reconstruct the evolutionary history of the complex we generated a molecular phylogeny based on genome-wide SNP loci obtained from genotyping-by-sequencing, we ran ancestral range biogeographic analyses, and assessed fine-scale genetic structure between and within archipelagos using admixture analysis. To test for a species-level radiation, we applied a probabilistic tree-based species delimitation method (mPTP) and an integrative taxonomy approach including phenotypic differences. Results revealed a circuitous colonization pathway in Macaronesia, from the mainland to the Azores, followed by Madeira, and finally the Canary Islands. The Azores showed surprisingly high genetic diversity, similar to that found on the mainland, and the other archipelagos showed the expected sequential loss of genetic diversity. Species delimi-tation methods supported the existence of several species within the complex. We conclude that the common chaffinch underwent a rapid radiation across Macaronesia that was driven by the sequential colonization of the different archipelagos, resulting in phenotypically and genetically distinct, independent evolutionary lineages. We recommend a taxonomic revision of the complex that takes into account its genetic and phenotypic diversity.

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