| Literature DB >> 26754355 |
Frode Fossøy1, Michael D Sorenson2, Wei Liang3, Torbjørn Ekrem4, Arne Moksnes1, Anders P Møller5, Jarkko Rutila6, Eivin Røskaft1, Fugo Takasu7, Canchao Yang3, Bård G Stokke1.
Abstract
Maternal inheritance via the female-specific W chromosome was long ago proposed as a potential solution to the evolutionary enigma of co-existing host-specific races (or 'gentes') in avian brood parasites. Here we report the first unambiguous evidence for maternal inheritance of egg colouration in the brood-parasitic common cuckoo Cuculus canorus. Females laying blue eggs belong to an ancient (∼2.6 Myr) maternal lineage, as evidenced by both mitochondrial and W-linked DNA, but are indistinguishable at nuclear DNA from other common cuckoos. Hence, cuckoo host races with blue eggs are distinguished only by maternally inherited components of the genome, which maintain host-specific adaptation despite interbreeding among males and females reared by different hosts. A mitochondrial phylogeny suggests that blue eggs originated in Asia and then expanded westwards as female cuckoos laying blue eggs interbred with the existing European population, introducing an adaptive trait that expanded the range of potential hosts.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26754355 PMCID: PMC4729921 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1DNA sampling.
Breeding distribution (shaded) of the four common cuckoo Cuculus canorus subspecies44 along with DNA sampling localities coded to illustrate the geographic distribution of two divergent mitochondrial lineages and their corresponding egg colours. All cuckoos laying blue eggs belong to the same ancient mitochondrial lineage (labelled above as ‘bakeri' but also including C. c. canorus blue eggs) but are indistinguishable from other common cuckoos at nuclear loci. The blue egg colour is therefore maternally inherited. A recent split within C. c. bakeri is associated with a loss of blue egg colour in eastern Asia. The map is constructed in ArcMap 10.1.
Figure 2Egg phenotypes and haplotype networks.
(a) Examples illustrating host-specific egg mimicry and the tremendous variation in egg colour among common cuckoo host races. From left: meadow pipit Antus pratensis, brambling Fringilla montifringilla, great reed warbler Acrocephalus arundinaceus and common redstart Phoenicurus phoenicurus (in each clutch, the cuckoo egg is slightly larger). All photos by B.G.S. Haplotype networks for (b) COI—mitochondrial DNA, (c) CHD-W—nuclear W chromosome, (d) MYO—nuclear autosomal (2N) and (e) SPIN—nuclear Z chromosome, all sequenced in common cuckoo host races from Europe and Asia. Each coloured circle represents a unique haplotype, the relative frequency of which in our sample is proportional to area. Samples from females of different host races are colour-coded as indicated. Each line segment represents a single nucleotide difference, with small open circles indicating intermediate haplotypes not found in our sample. Sample size for the autosomal MYO gene is larger because each sample yields two alleles.
Figure 3STRUCTURE analysis.
(a) The Evanno method implemented in STRUCTURE HARVESTER35 suggests that the most likely number of common cuckoo Cuculus canorus genetic groups in Europe is K=3 based on 13 microsatellite markers and 104 individuals. (b) Individual and (c) population Q matrices for the three genetic groups show little evidence that this putative population structure is related to either host race or the divergent mitochondrial lineages.
Pairwise genetic divergence between selected Cuculus lineages for three mitochondrial genes.
| 0.14% | 0.64% | 0.22% | |
| 0.52% | 0.69% | 0.71% | |
| 3.16% | 3.86% | 2.15% | |
| 2.91% | 4.99% | 3.43% | |
| 3.33% | 4.27% | 2.16% | |
| 5.11% | 8.21% | 5.09% | |
| Substitution model | TrN+I | TrN+G | HKY+I |
Common cuckoos Cuculus canorus parasitizing common redstarts Phoenicurus phoenicurus in Finland and Ashy-throated parrotbills Paradoxornis alphonsianus in China lay immaculate blue eggs.
Figure 4Phylogenetic relationships and dating.
Mitochondrial phylogeny and approximate divergence times for the common cuckoo Cuculus canorus and closely related species. The analysis is based on a comprehensive cuculiform data set representing 119 of 141 recognized cuckoo species21 augmented with additional data for representative samples from this study (see Supplementary Fig. 2 for the complete phylogeny). Blue colour indicates common cuckoo lineages laying immaculate blue eggs. All nodes have posterior probabilities of 1, except as indicated. Approximate divergence times are shown with 95% highest posterior density intervals. See Supplementary Information for details on samples and calibration.