Cryptic and extensive hybridization between ancient lineages of American crows
Most species and therefore most hybrid zones have historically been defined using phenotypic characters. However, both speciation and hybridization can occur with negligible morphological differentiation. Recently developed genomic tools provide the means to better understand cryptic speciation and...
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Zusammenfassung: | Most species and therefore most hybrid zones have historically been
defined using phenotypic characters. However, both speciation and
hybridization can occur with negligible morphological differentiation.
Recently developed genomic tools provide the means to better understand
cryptic speciation and hybridization. The Northwestern Crow (Corvus
caurinus) and American Crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos) are continuously
distributed sister taxa that lack reliable traditional characters for
identification. In this first population genomic study of Northwestern and
American crows, we use genomic SNPs (nuDNA) and mtDNA to investigate the
degree of genetic differentiation between these crows and the extent to
which they may hybridize. Our results indicate that American and
Northwestern crows have distinct evolutionary histories, supported by two
nuDNA ancestry clusters and two 1.1%-divergent mtDNA clades dating to the
late Pleistocene, when glacial advances may have isolated crow populations
in separate refugia. We document extensive hybridization, with geographic
overlap of mtDNA clades and admixture of nuDNA across >900 km of
western Washington and western British Columbia. This broad hybrid zone
consists of late-generation hybrids and backcrosses, but not recent (e.g.,
F1) hybrids. Nuclear DNA and mtDNA clines had concordant widths and were
both centered in southwestern British Columbia, farther north than
previously postulated. Overall, our results suggest a history of
reticulate evolution in American and Northwestern crows, perhaps due to
recurring neutral expansion(s) from Pleistocene glacial refugia followed
by lineage fusion(s). However, we do not rule out a contributing role for
more recent potential drivers of hybridization, such as expansion into
human-modified habitats. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.rr4xgxd5f |