Data from: Population assignment reveals low migratory connectivity in a weakly structured songbird
Understanding migratory connectivity is essential for determining the drivers behind population dynamics and for implementing effective conservation strategies for migratory species. Genetic markers provide a means to describe migratory connectivity, however they can be uninformative for species wit...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding migratory connectivity is essential for determining the
drivers behind population dynamics and for implementing effective
conservation strategies for migratory species. Genetic markers provide a
means to describe migratory connectivity, however they can be
uninformative for species with weak population genetic structure, which
has limited their application. Here, we demonstrated a genomic approach to
describing migratory connectivity in the prothonotary warbler,
Protonotaria citrea, a Neotropical songbird of conservation concern. Using
26,189 SNPs, we revealed regional genetic structure between the
Mississippi River Valley and the Atlantic Seaboard with overall weak
genetic differentiation among populations (FST = 0.0055; 95% CI: 0.0051 -
0.0059). Genetic variation had a stronger association with geographic
rather than environmental factors, with each explaining 14.5% and 8.2% of
genetic variation, respectively. By varying the numbers of genomic markers
used in population assignment models with individuals of known provenance,
we identified a maximum assignment accuracy (89.7% to site, 94.3% to
region) using a subset of 600 highly differentiated SNPs. We then assigned
samples from nonbreeding sites to breeding region, and found low migratory
connectivity. Our results highlight the importance of filtering markers
for informative loci in models of population assignment. Quantifying
migratory connectivity for weakly structured species will be useful for
expanding studies to a wider-range of migratory species across taxonomic
groups and may contribute to a deeper understanding of the evolution of
migratory strategies. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.hb1g263 |