Hybridization between closely related songbirds is related to human habitat disturbance

Human habitat disturbances can promote hybridization between closely related, but typically reproductively isolated, species. We explored whether human habitat disturbances are related to hybridization between two closely related songbirds, black‐capped and mountain chickadees, using both genomic an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Global change biology 2023-02, Vol.29 (4), p.955-968
Hauptverfasser: Grabenstein, Kathryn C., Otter, Ken A., Burg, Theresa M., Taylor, Scott A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Human habitat disturbances can promote hybridization between closely related, but typically reproductively isolated, species. We explored whether human habitat disturbances are related to hybridization between two closely related songbirds, black‐capped and mountain chickadees, using both genomic and citizen science data sets. First, we genotyped 409 individuals from across both species' ranges using reduced‐representation genome sequencing and compared measures of genetic admixture to a composite measure of human landscape disturbance. Then, using eBird observations, we compared human landscape disturbance values for sites where phenotypically diagnosed hybrids were observed to locations where either parental species was observed to determine whether hybrid chickadees are reported in more disturbed areas. We found that hybridization between black‐capped and mountain chickadees positively correlates with human habitat disturbances. From genomic data, we found that (1) hybrid index (HI) significantly increased with habitat disturbance, (2) more hybrids were sampled in disturbed habitats, (3) mean HIs were higher in disturbed habitats versus wild habitats, and (4) hybrids were detected in habitats with significantly higher disturbance values than parentals. Using eBird data, we found that both hybrid and black‐capped chickadees were significantly more disturbance‐associated than mountain chickadees. Surprisingly, we found that nearly every black‐capped chickadee we sampled contained some proportion of hybrid ancestry, while we detected very few mountain chickadee backcrosses. Our results highlight that hybridization between black‐capped and mountain chickadees is widespread, but initial hybridization is rare (few F1s were detected). We conclude that human habitat disturbances can erode pre‐zygotic reproductive barriers between chickadees and that post‐zygotic isolation is incomplete. Understanding what becomes of recently hybridizing species following large‐scale habitat disturbances is a new, but pressing, consideration for successfully preserving genetic biodiversity in a rapidly changing world. Despite being a common and significant outcome of human landscape change, disturbance‐mediated hybridization is vastly understudied because it has only recently garnered attention in the genomic era. We document widespread and common (but cryptic) hybridization between black‐capped and mountain chickadees that correlates with human habitat disturbances at the range
ISSN:1354-1013
1365-2486
DOI:10.1111/gcb.16476