Description
Island species provide excellent models for investigating how selection and drift operate in wild populations, and for determining how these processes act to influence local adaptation and speciation. Here, we examine the role of selection and drift in shaping genomic and phenotypic variation across recently separated populations of Berthelot's pipit (Anthus berthelotii), a passerine bird endemic to three archipelagos in the Atlantic. We first characterised genetic diversity and population structuring, which supported previous inferences of a history of recent colonisations and bottlenecks. We then tested for regions of the genome associated with the ecologically important traits of bill length and malaria infection, both of which vary substantially across populations in this species. We identified a SNP associated with variation in bill length among individuals, islands and archipelagos; patterns of variation at this SNP suggest that both phenotypic and genotypic variation in bill length is largely shaped by founder effects. Malaria was associated with SNPs near/within genes involved in the immune response, but this relationship was not consistent among archipelagos, supporting the view that disease resistance is complex and rapidly evolving. Although we found little evidence for divergent selection at candidate loci for bill length and malaria resistance, genome scan analyses pointed to several genes related to immunity and metabolism as having important roles in divergence and adaptation. Our findings highlight the utility and challenges involved with combining association mapping and population genetic analysis in non-equilibrium populations, to disentangle the effects of drift and selection on shaping genotypes and phenotypes.
When using this data, please cite the original publication:
Armstrong C, Richardson DS, Hipperson H, Horsburgh GJ, Küpper C, Percival-Alwyn L, Clark M, Burke T, Spurgin LG (2018) Genomic associations with bill length and disease reveal drift and selection across island bird populations. Evolution Letters 2(1): 22-36. https://doi.org/10.1002/evl3.38
Additionally, please cite the Dryad data package:
Armstrong C, Richardson DS, Hipperson H, Horsburgh GJ, Kuepper C, Percival-Alwyn L, Clark M, Burke T, Spurgin LG (2018) Data from: Genomic associations with bill length and disease reveal drift and selection across island bird populations. Dryad Digital Repository. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.9642b
When using this data, please cite the original publication:
Armstrong C, Richardson DS, Hipperson H, Horsburgh GJ, Küpper C, Percival-Alwyn L, Clark M, Burke T, Spurgin LG (2018) Genomic associations with bill length and disease reveal drift and selection across island bird populations. Evolution Letters 2(1): 22-36. https://doi.org/10.1002/evl3.38
Additionally, please cite the Dryad data package:
Armstrong C, Richardson DS, Hipperson H, Horsburgh GJ, Kuepper C, Percival-Alwyn L, Clark M, Burke T, Spurgin LG (2018) Data from: Genomic associations with bill length and disease reveal drift and selection across island bird populations. Dryad Digital Repository. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.9642b
Date made available | 11 Jan 2018 |
---|---|
Publisher | Dryad data repository |