4.4 Article

A genomic investigation of the putative contact zone between divergent Brown Creeper (Certhia americana) lineages: chromosomal patterns of genetic differentiation

Journal

GENOME
Volume 59, Issue 2, Pages 115-125

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING, NRC RESEARCH PRESS
DOI: 10.1139/gen-2015-0093

Keywords

contact zone; chromosomal patterns; next-generation sequencing; sky islands

Funding

  1. American Museum of Natural History Frank M. Chapman Memorial Fund Grant
  2. American Ornithologists' Union Student Research Grant
  3. NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant [DEB-1406989]
  4. NSF [DEB 1241181]
  5. NSF IGERT C-CHANGE Program at the University of Kansas [0801522]
  6. NIH [P20GM103638]
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences
  8. Division Of Environmental Biology [1406989, 1241181] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  9. Division Of Graduate Education
  10. Direct For Education and Human Resources [0801522] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Sky islands, or montane forest separated by different lowland habitats, are highly fragmented regions that potentially limit gene flow between isolated populations. In the sky islands of the Madrean Archipelago (Arizona, USA), various taxa display different phylogeographic patterns, from unrestricted gene flow among sky islands to complex patterns with multiple distinct lineages. Using genomic-level approaches allows the investigation of differential patterns of gene flow, selection, and genetic differentiation among chromosomes and specific genomic regions between sky island populations. Here, we used thousands of SNPs to investigate the putative contact zone of divergent Brown Creeper (Certhia americana) lineages in the Madrean Archipelago sky islands. We found the two lineages to be completely allopatric (during the breeding season) with a lack of hybridization and gene flow between lineages and no genetic structure among sky islands within lineages. Additionally, the two lineages inhabit different climatic and ecosystem conditions and have many local primary song dialects in the southern Arizona mountain ranges. We identified a positive relationship between genetic differentiation and chromosome size, but the sex chromosome (Z) was not found to be an outlier. Differential patterns of genetic differentiation per chromosome may be explained by genetic drift-possibly in conjunction with non-random mating and non-random gene flow-due to variance in recombination rates among chromosomes.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available