Cargando…

Sea surface temperature, rather than land mass or geographic distance, may drive genetic differentiation in a species complex of highly dispersive seabirds

Seabirds, particularly Procellariiformes, are highly mobile organisms with a great capacity for long dispersal, though simultaneously showing high philopatry, two conflicting life‐history traits that may lead to contrasted patterns of genetic population structure. Landmasses were suggested to explai...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Torres, Lucas, Pante, Eric, González‐Solís, Jacob, Viricel, Amélia, Ribout, Cécile, Zino, Francis, MacKin, Will, Precheur, Carine, Tourmetz, Julie, Calabrese, Licia, Militão, Teresa, Zango, Laura, Shirihai, Hadoram, Bretagnolle, Vincent
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8571584/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34765153
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8180
_version_ 1784595053616824320
author Torres, Lucas
Pante, Eric
González‐Solís, Jacob
Viricel, Amélia
Ribout, Cécile
Zino, Francis
MacKin, Will
Precheur, Carine
Tourmetz, Julie
Calabrese, Licia
Militão, Teresa
Zango, Laura
Shirihai, Hadoram
Bretagnolle, Vincent
author_facet Torres, Lucas
Pante, Eric
González‐Solís, Jacob
Viricel, Amélia
Ribout, Cécile
Zino, Francis
MacKin, Will
Precheur, Carine
Tourmetz, Julie
Calabrese, Licia
Militão, Teresa
Zango, Laura
Shirihai, Hadoram
Bretagnolle, Vincent
author_sort Torres, Lucas
collection PubMed
description Seabirds, particularly Procellariiformes, are highly mobile organisms with a great capacity for long dispersal, though simultaneously showing high philopatry, two conflicting life‐history traits that may lead to contrasted patterns of genetic population structure. Landmasses were suggested to explain differentiation patterns observed in seabirds, but philopatry, isolation by distance, segregation between breeding and nonbreeding zones, and oceanographic conditions (sea surface temperatures) may also contribute to differentiation patterns. To our knowledge, no study has simultaneously contrasted the multiple factors contributing to the diversification of seabird species, especially in the gray zone of speciation. We conducted a multilocus phylogeographic study on a widespread seabird species complex, the little shearwater complex, showing highly homogeneous morphology, which led to considerable taxonomic debate. We sequenced three mitochondrial and six nuclear markers on all extant populations from the Atlantic (lherminieri) and Indian Oceans (bailloni), that is, five nominal lineages from 13 populations, along with one population from the eastern Pacific Ocean (representing the dichrous lineage). We found sharp differentiation among populations separated by the African continent with both mitochondrial and nuclear markers, while only mitochondrial markers allowed characterizing the five nominal lineages. No differentiation could be detected within these five lineages, questioning the strong level of philopatry showed by these shearwaters. Finally, we propose that Atlantic populations likely originated from the Indian Ocean. Within the Atlantic, a stepping‐stone process accounts for the current distribution. Based on our divergence time estimates, we suggest that the observed pattern of differentiation mostly resulted from historical and current variation in sea surface temperatures.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8571584
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-85715842021-11-10 Sea surface temperature, rather than land mass or geographic distance, may drive genetic differentiation in a species complex of highly dispersive seabirds Torres, Lucas Pante, Eric González‐Solís, Jacob Viricel, Amélia Ribout, Cécile Zino, Francis MacKin, Will Precheur, Carine Tourmetz, Julie Calabrese, Licia Militão, Teresa Zango, Laura Shirihai, Hadoram Bretagnolle, Vincent Ecol Evol Research Articles Seabirds, particularly Procellariiformes, are highly mobile organisms with a great capacity for long dispersal, though simultaneously showing high philopatry, two conflicting life‐history traits that may lead to contrasted patterns of genetic population structure. Landmasses were suggested to explain differentiation patterns observed in seabirds, but philopatry, isolation by distance, segregation between breeding and nonbreeding zones, and oceanographic conditions (sea surface temperatures) may also contribute to differentiation patterns. To our knowledge, no study has simultaneously contrasted the multiple factors contributing to the diversification of seabird species, especially in the gray zone of speciation. We conducted a multilocus phylogeographic study on a widespread seabird species complex, the little shearwater complex, showing highly homogeneous morphology, which led to considerable taxonomic debate. We sequenced three mitochondrial and six nuclear markers on all extant populations from the Atlantic (lherminieri) and Indian Oceans (bailloni), that is, five nominal lineages from 13 populations, along with one population from the eastern Pacific Ocean (representing the dichrous lineage). We found sharp differentiation among populations separated by the African continent with both mitochondrial and nuclear markers, while only mitochondrial markers allowed characterizing the five nominal lineages. No differentiation could be detected within these five lineages, questioning the strong level of philopatry showed by these shearwaters. Finally, we propose that Atlantic populations likely originated from the Indian Ocean. Within the Atlantic, a stepping‐stone process accounts for the current distribution. Based on our divergence time estimates, we suggest that the observed pattern of differentiation mostly resulted from historical and current variation in sea surface temperatures. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-10-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8571584/ /pubmed/34765153 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8180 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Torres, Lucas
Pante, Eric
González‐Solís, Jacob
Viricel, Amélia
Ribout, Cécile
Zino, Francis
MacKin, Will
Precheur, Carine
Tourmetz, Julie
Calabrese, Licia
Militão, Teresa
Zango, Laura
Shirihai, Hadoram
Bretagnolle, Vincent
Sea surface temperature, rather than land mass or geographic distance, may drive genetic differentiation in a species complex of highly dispersive seabirds
title Sea surface temperature, rather than land mass or geographic distance, may drive genetic differentiation in a species complex of highly dispersive seabirds
title_full Sea surface temperature, rather than land mass or geographic distance, may drive genetic differentiation in a species complex of highly dispersive seabirds
title_fullStr Sea surface temperature, rather than land mass or geographic distance, may drive genetic differentiation in a species complex of highly dispersive seabirds
title_full_unstemmed Sea surface temperature, rather than land mass or geographic distance, may drive genetic differentiation in a species complex of highly dispersive seabirds
title_short Sea surface temperature, rather than land mass or geographic distance, may drive genetic differentiation in a species complex of highly dispersive seabirds
title_sort sea surface temperature, rather than land mass or geographic distance, may drive genetic differentiation in a species complex of highly dispersive seabirds
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8571584/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34765153
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8180
work_keys_str_mv AT torreslucas seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT panteeric seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT gonzalezsolisjacob seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT viricelamelia seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT riboutcecile seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT zinofrancis seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT mackinwill seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT precheurcarine seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT tourmetzjulie seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT calabreselicia seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT militaoteresa seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT zangolaura seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT shirihaihadoram seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds
AT bretagnollevincent seasurfacetemperatureratherthanlandmassorgeographicdistancemaydrivegeneticdifferentiationinaspeciescomplexofhighlydispersiveseabirds