4.5 Article

Integrative tracking methods elucidate the evolutionary dynamics of a migratory divide

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 4, 期 17, 页码 3456-3469

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.1205

关键词

Catharus guttatus; divergence; geolocator; hybridization; migratory divide

资金

  1. UCLA Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  2. Explorer's Club
  3. LA Audubon
  4. American Ornithologists' Union
  5. NSF [IRCEB9977072]
  6. NASA [IDS/03-0169-0347]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Migratory divides, the boundary between adjacent bird populations that migrate in different directions, are of considerable interest to evolutionary biologists because of their alleged role in speciation of migratory birds. However, the small size of many passerines has traditionally limited the tools available to track populations and as a result, restricted our ability to study how reproductive isolation might occur across a divide. Here, we integrate multiple approaches by using genetic, geolocator, and morphological data to investigate a migratory divide in hermit thrushes (Catharus guttatus). First, high genetic divergence between migratory groups indicates the divide is a region of secondary contact between historically isolated populations. Second, despite low sample sizes, geolocators reveal dramatic differences in overwintering locations and migratory distance of individuals from either side of the divide. Third, a diagnostic genetic marker that proved useful for tracking a key population suggests a likely intermediate nonbreeding location of birds from the hybrid zone. This finding, combined with lower return rates from this region, is consistent with comparatively lower fitness of hybrids, which is possibly due to this intermediate migration pattern. We discuss our results in the context of reproductive isolating mechanisms associated with migration patterns that have long been hypothesized to promote divergence across migratory divides.

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