| Literature DB >> 33543771 |
Jennifer Walsh1,2, Leonardo Campagna1,2, William E Feeney3,4, Jacinta King5, Michael S Webster6,7.
Abstract
The existence of distinct traits in island versus mainland populations offers opportunities to gain insights into how eco-evolutionary processes operate under natural conditions. We used two island colonization events in the white-winged fairywren (Malurus leucopterus) to investigate the genomic and demographic origin of melanic plumage. This avian species is distributed across most of Australia, and males of the mainland subspecies (M. l. leuconotus) exhibit a blue nuptial plumage in contrast to males of two island subspecies - M. l. leucopterus on Dirk Hartog Island and M. l. edouardi on Barrow Island - that exhibit a black nuptial plumage. We used reduced-representation sequencing to explore differentiation and demographic history in this species and found clear patterns of divergence between mainland and island populations, with additional substructuring on the mainland. Divergence between the mainland and Dirk Hartog was approximately 10 times more recent than the split between the mainland and Barrow Island, supporting two independent colonizations. In both cases, estimated gene flow between the mainland and the islands was low, contributing to signals of divergence among subspecies. Our results present demographic reconstructions of mainland-island dynamics and associated plumage variation in white-winged fairywrens, with broader implications regarding our understanding of convergent evolution in insular populations.Entities:
Keywords: Demographic history; Malurus leucopterus; genetic structure; island melanism; island syndrome; plumage coloration
Year: 2021 PMID: 33543771 DOI: 10.1111/evo.14185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evolution ISSN: 0014-3820 Impact factor: 3.694