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Revealing the Demographic History of the European nightjar (Caprimulgus europaeus).
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  • George Day,
  • Graeme Fox,
  • Helen Hipperson,
  • Kathryn Maher,
  • Rachel Tucker,
  • Gavin Horsburgh,
  • Dean Waters,
  • K. L. Durrant,
  • Kathryn Arnold,
  • Terry Burke,
  • J. Slate
George Day
University of York

Corresponding Author:gwd500@york.ac.uk

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Graeme Fox
University of Nottingham
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Helen Hipperson
The University of Sheffield
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Kathryn Maher
The University of Sheffield
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Rachel Tucker
The University of Sheffield
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Gavin Horsburgh
The University of Sheffield
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Dean Waters
University of York
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K. L. Durrant
University of Nottingham
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Kathryn Arnold
University of York
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Terry Burke
The University of Sheffield
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J. Slate
The University of Sheffield
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Abstract

A species’ demographic history provides important context to contemporary population genetics and a possible insight into past responses to climate change. An individual’s genome provides a window into the evolutionary history of contemporary populations. Pairwise Sequentially Markovian Coalescent (PSMC) analysis uses information from a single genome to derive fluctuations in effective population size change over the last ~5 million years. Here we apply PSMC analysis to two European nightjar (Caprimulgus europaeus) genomes, sampled in Northwest and Southern Europe, with the aim of revealing the demographic history of nightjar in Europe. We successfully reconstructed effective population size over the last 5 million years for two contemporary nightjar populations. Our analysis shows that nightjar are responsive to global climate change, with effective population size broadly increasing under stable warm periods and decreasing during cooler spans and prolonged glacial periods. PSMC analysis on the pseudo-diploid combination of the two genomes revealed fluctuations in gene flow between the populations over time, with gene flow ceasing by the last-glacial maximum. This pattern of differentiation is in line with the species utilising different refugia during glacial maxima. We suggest that nightjar in Europe may show latitudinal (East-West) genetic structuring as a result of reduced gene flow between different glacial refugia. Finally, our results suggest that migratory behaviour in nightjar likely evolved prior to the last-glacial maximum, with long-distance migration seemingly persisting throughout the Pleistocene. However, further genetic structure analysis of nightjar from known breeding sites across the species’ contemporary range is needed to fully understand the extent and origins of range-wide differentiation in the species.