Rapid evolutionary divergence of a songbird population following recent
colonization of an anthropogenic habitat
Abstract
Colonization of a novel environment by a few individuals can lead to
rapid evolutionary change, yet evidence of the relative contributions of
neutral and selective factors in promoting divergence during the early
stages of colonization remain scarce. We explore the role of neutral and
selective forces in the divergence of a unique urban population of the
dark-eyed junco (Junco hyemalis), which became established on the campus
of the University of California at San Diego (UCSD) in the early 1980s.
Previous studies based on microsatellite loci documented significant
genetic differentiation of the urban population as well as divergence in
phenotypic traits relative to nearby montane populations, yet the
geographic origin of the colonization and the factors involved remained
uncertain. Our genome-wide SNP dataset confirmed the marked genetic
differentiation of the UCSD population, and we identified the coastal
subspecies pinosus from central California as its sister group instead
of the neighboring mountain population. Demographic inference recovered
a separation from pinosus as recent as 20 to 32 generations ago after a
strong bottleneck, suggesting a role for drift in genetic
differentiation. However, we also found significant associations between
habitat variables and genome-wide variants linked to functional genes,
some of which have been reported as potentially adaptive in birds
inhabiting modified environments. These results suggest that the
interplay between founder events and selection may result in rapid
shifts in neutral and adaptive loci across the genome, and reveal the
UCSD junco population as a case of contemporary evolutionary divergence
in an anthropogenic environment.