4.6 Article

Widespread genetic connectivity of feral pigeons across the Northeastern megacity

期刊

EVOLUTIONARY APPLICATIONS
卷 14, 期 1, 页码 150-162

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eva.12972

关键词

Columba livia; Northeastern megacity; pigeon; population genetics; Rock Dove; urban evolution

资金

  1. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at Fordham University
  2. Clare Boothe Luce Foundation
  3. National Science Foundation [DBI 1531639]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Urbanization can influence gene flow differently depending on the organism and the degree of urbanization. Spatial population genetic studies on feral pigeons in the Northeastern megacity revealed two genetic clusters, with reduced urbanization in coastal Connecticut potentially contributing to the substructuring observed. Urbanization in the Northeastern megacity appears to be facilitating gene flow in feral pigeons, as indicated by higher-than-expected gene flow within each city.
Urbanization may restrict, facilitate, or have no effect on gene flow, depending on the organism and extent of urbanization. In human commensals, with high dispersal ability, urbanization can facilitate gene flow by providing continuous suitable habitat across a wide range. Additionally, suburban or rural areas with lower human population density may act as a barrier to gene flow for these human commensals. Spatial population genetic approaches provide a means to understand genetic connectivity across geographically expansive areas that encompass multiple metropolitan areas. Here, we examined the spatial genetic patterns of feral pigeons (Columba livia) living in cities in the eastern United States. We focused our sampling on the Northeastern megacity, which is a region covering six large cities (Boston, Providence, New York City, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, DC). We performed ddRAD-Seqon 473 samples, recovered 35,200 SNPs, and then used multiple evolutionary clustering analyses to investigate population structuring. These analyses revealed that pigeons formed two genetic clusters-a northern cluster containing samples from Boston and Providence and a southern cluster containing all other samples. This substructuring is possibly due to reduced urbanization across coastal Connecticut that separates Boston and Providence from New York and mid-Atlantic cities. We found that pairs of pigeons within 25 km are highly related (Mantel r = 0.217, p = .001) and that beyond 50 km, pigeons are no more related than they would be at random. Our analysis detected higher-than-expected gene flow under an isolation by distance model within each city. We conclude that the extreme urbanization characteristic of the Northeastern megacity is likely facilitating gene flow in feral pigeons.

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