4.7 Article

Major population splits coincide with episodes of rapid climate change in a forest-dependent bird

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.1066

Keywords

climate change; genetic divergence; niche model; pied flycatchers; ficedula; last glacial maximum

Funding

  1. Knut and Alice Wallenberg foundation [2014/0044]
  2. Swedish Research Council [2013-8271, 2020-04686]
  3. Birgit and Hellmuth Hertz Foundation of Royal Physiographic Society of Lund [2017-39034]
  4. Academy of Finland [314254]
  5. Estonian Research Council [IUT34-8]
  6. Emil Aaltonen Foundation
  7. Swedish Research Council [2020-04686] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

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Climate change can impact population demography by altering patterns of gene flow and reproductive isolation. A study on pied flycatchers using a directly estimated mutation rate in birds has revealed that major population splits occurred during periods of increased climate instability and rapid global temperature change. This highlights the potential strong impact that episodes of climate instability and rapid temperature changes can have on species' evolutionary trajectories.
Climate change influences population demography by altering patterns of gene flow and reproductive isolation. Direct mutation rates offer the possibility for accurate dating on the within-species level but are currently only available for a handful of vertebrate species. Here, we use the first directly estimated mutation rate in birds to study the evolutionary history of pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca). Using a combination of demographic inference and species distribution modelling, we show that all major population splits in this forest-dependent system occurred during periods of increased climate instability and rapid global temperature change. We show that the divergent Spanish subspecies originated during the Eemian-Weichselian transition 115-104 thousand years ago (kya), and not during the last glacial maximum (26.5-19 kya), as previously suggested. The magnitude and rates of climate change during the glacial-interglacial transitions that preceded population splits in pied flycatchers were similar to, or exceeded, those predicted to occur in the course of the current, human-induced climate crisis. As such, our results provide a timely reminder of the strong impact that episodes of climate instability and rapid temperature changes can have on species' evolutionary trajectories, with important implications for the natural world in the Anthropocene.

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