TY - JOUR
T1 - Independent evolution of intermediate bill widths in a seabird clade
AU - Masello, Juan F.
AU - Ryan, Peter G.
AU - Shepherd, Lara D.
AU - Quillfeldt, Petra
AU - Cherel, Yves
AU - Tennyson, Alan J.D.
AU - Alderman, Rachael
AU - Calderón, Luciano
AU - Cole, Theresa L.
AU - Cuthbert, Richard J.
AU - Dilley, Ben J.
AU - Massaro, Melanie
AU - Miskelly, Colin M.
AU - Navarro, Joan
AU - Phillips, Richard A.
AU - Weimerskirch, Henri
AU - Moodley, Yoshan
N1 - Funding Information:
Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. PQ, JFM, TLC and LC were supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Germany), Heisenberg program (grant number DFG, Qu 148-5 to P.Q.). Logistical and financial support was obtained from the South African Department of Environmental Affairs, through the South African National Antarctic Programme. LDS was supported by a Rutherford Discovery Fellowship from the Royal Society of New Zealand.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).
PY - 2022/1
Y1 - 2022/1
N2 - Interspecific introgression can occur between species that evolve rapidly within an adaptive radiation. Pachyptila
petrels differ in bill size and are characterised by incomplete
reproductive isolation, leading to interspecific gene flow. Salvin’s
prion (Pachyptila salvini), whose bill width is intermediate between broad-billed (P. vittata) and Antarctic (P. desolata) prions, evolved through homoploid hybrid speciation. MacGillivray’s prion (P. macgillivrayi), known from a single population on St Paul (Indian Ocean), has a bill width intermediate between salvini and vittata
and could also be the product of interspecies introgression or hybrid
speciation. Recently, another prion population phenotypically similar to
macgillivrayi was discovered on Gough (Atlantic Ocean), where it breeds 3 months later than vittata. The similarity in bill width between the medium-billed birds on Gough and macgillivrayi
suggest that they could be closely related. In this study, we used
genetic and morphological data to infer the phylogenetic position and
evolutionary history of P. macgillivrayi and the Gough medium-billed prion relative other Pachyptila
taxa, to determine whether species with medium bill widths evolved
through common ancestry or convergence. We found that Gough
medium-billed prions belong to the same evolutionary lineage as macgillivrayi, representing a new population of MacGillivray’s prion that originated through a colonisation event from St Paul. We show that macgillivrayi’s medium bill width evolved through divergence (genetic drift) and independently from that of salvini,
which evolved through hybridisation (gene flow). This represents the
independent convergence towards a similarly medium-billed phenotype. The
newly discovered MacGillivray’s prion population on Gough is of utmost
conservation relevance, as the relict macgillivrayi population in the Indian Ocean is very small.
AB - Interspecific introgression can occur between species that evolve rapidly within an adaptive radiation. Pachyptila
petrels differ in bill size and are characterised by incomplete
reproductive isolation, leading to interspecific gene flow. Salvin’s
prion (Pachyptila salvini), whose bill width is intermediate between broad-billed (P. vittata) and Antarctic (P. desolata) prions, evolved through homoploid hybrid speciation. MacGillivray’s prion (P. macgillivrayi), known from a single population on St Paul (Indian Ocean), has a bill width intermediate between salvini and vittata
and could also be the product of interspecies introgression or hybrid
speciation. Recently, another prion population phenotypically similar to
macgillivrayi was discovered on Gough (Atlantic Ocean), where it breeds 3 months later than vittata. The similarity in bill width between the medium-billed birds on Gough and macgillivrayi
suggest that they could be closely related. In this study, we used
genetic and morphological data to infer the phylogenetic position and
evolutionary history of P. macgillivrayi and the Gough medium-billed prion relative other Pachyptila
taxa, to determine whether species with medium bill widths evolved
through common ancestry or convergence. We found that Gough
medium-billed prions belong to the same evolutionary lineage as macgillivrayi, representing a new population of MacGillivray’s prion that originated through a colonisation event from St Paul. We show that macgillivrayi’s medium bill width evolved through divergence (genetic drift) and independently from that of salvini,
which evolved through hybridisation (gene flow). This represents the
independent convergence towards a similarly medium-billed phenotype. The
newly discovered MacGillivray’s prion population on Gough is of utmost
conservation relevance, as the relict macgillivrayi population in the Indian Ocean is very small.
KW - Convergent evolution
KW - Gough Island
KW - MacGillivray’s prion
KW - Pachyptila
KW - Procellariidae
KW - Procellariiformes
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U2 - 10.1007/s00438-021-01845-3
DO - 10.1007/s00438-021-01845-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 34921614
AN - SCOPUS:85121346489
SN - 1617-4615
VL - 297
SP - 183
EP - 198
JO - Molecular Genetics and Genomics: an international journal
JF - Molecular Genetics and Genomics: an international journal
IS - 1
ER -