Abstract
Island populations diverge from the mainland and from each other by both
natural selection and neutral forces such as founder effects and genetic
drift. In this work we aim to determine the relative roles of selection
and drift in the diversification of chaffinches (Fringilla spp.)
in Macaronesia. We tested the hypothesis that taxa inhabiting
Macaronesian archipelagos, which exhibit significant differences in
habitat and climate compared to the mainland, should experience distinct
ecological pressures, leading to divergence at loci under selection
related to environmental variables. To determine the role of local
adaptation in the differentiation of these taxa, we performed
genotype-environment association (GEA) analyses using ten environmental
variables and 52,306 single-nucleotide polymorphism markers obtained
from genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) in 79 chaffinches. Redundancy
analysis (RDA) revealed that genomic variation is associated with
environmental variables, and identified candidate genes related to
phenotypic traits and environmental variables. Variables associated with
habitat type and precipitation, together with drift, played an important
role in the genomic differentiation between chaffinches from Macaronesia
and the mainland, as well as within the Canarian archipelago. Genetic
drift was identified as the main factor in the differentiation of North
African chaffinches from Macaronesia and mainland Europe, as well as
Madeira chaffinches from those in the Canary Islands. Finally,
chaffinches from the Canary Islands show an incipient diversification
process at the genetic and phenotypic level driven by both selection and
neutral processes. Our results suggest that both habitat-driven local
adaptation and drift have played a role in the radiation of chaffinch
taxa in Macaronesia.