Environmental correlates of genetic variation in the invasive European starling in North America
Autor: | Natalie R. Hofmeister, Irby J. Lovette, Scott J. Werner |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine Population New York 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences 03 medical and health sciences Effective population size Genetics Animals Humans education Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Local adaptation Panmixia education.field_of_study biology Starling Genetic Variation biology.organism_classification 030104 developmental biology Population bottleneck Sturnus Evolutionary biology North America Starlings Biological dispersal Introduced Species |
Zdroj: | Molecular Ecology. 30:1251-1263 |
ISSN: | 1365-294X 0962-1083 |
Popis: | Populations of invasive species that colonize and spread in novel environments may differentiate both through demographic processes and local selection. European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) were introduced to New York in 1890 and subsequently spread throughout North America, becoming one of the most widespread and numerous bird species on the continent. Genome-wide comparisons across starling individuals and populations can identify demographic and/or selective factors that facilitated this rapid and successful expansion. We investigated patterns of genomic diversity and differentiation using reduced-representation genome sequencing of 17 winter-season sampling sites. Consistent with this species' high dispersal rate and rapid expansion history, we found low geographical differentiation and few FST outliers even at a continental scale. Despite starting from a founding population of ~180 individuals, North American starlings show only a moderate genetic bottleneck, and models suggest a dramatic increase in effective population size since introduction. In genotype-environment associations we found that ~200 single-nucleotide polymorphisms are correlated with temperature and/or precipitation against a background of negligible genome- and range-wide divergence. Given this evidence, we suggest that local adaptation in North American starlings may have evolved rapidly even in this wide-ranging and evolutionarily young system. This survey of genomic signatures of expansion in North American starlings is the most comprehensive to date and complements ongoing studies of world-wide local adaptation in these highly dispersive and invasive birds. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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