Back to Search Start Over

Gradual transitions in genetics and songs between coastal and inland populations of Setophaga townsendi

Authors :
Madelyn Ore
Silu Wang
Darren Irwin
Source :
Ornithology. 140
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022.

Abstract

Setophaga townsendi is a species of wood warbler (family Parulidae) in northwestern North America that has geographic structure in the mitochondrial and nuclear genomes: while interior populations have differentiated mitonuclear ancestry from the sister species S. occidentalis, coastal populations have a mix of inland and S. occidentalis mitonuclear ancestries. This coastal to inland transition in genomic ancestry raises the possibility of similar geographic structure in phenotypic traits, especially those involved in mate choice. Using qualitative and multivariate approaches, we investigated whether there is a sharp transition between coastal and inland populations in both song and in nuclear DNA. We find there is a shallow geographic cline in Type I song but not in Type II song. Nuclear DNA shows a gradient between coast and inland. There is little correlation between variation in song and the isolation-by-distance pattern in the nuclear DNA. Learned songbird song is shaped by both genetic and cultural processes. There has been a debate on whether song learning promotes or slows down population differentiation. By comparing the within-species variation in song and genetic structures, we can expand our understanding of the dynamic interplay between mating signals and population differentiation.

Details

ISSN :
27324613 and 00048038
Volume :
140
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ornithology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........afc58a6b30b40fe33427848b3f699901
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ornithology/ukac060