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Concurrent invasions of European starlings in Australia and North America reveal population-specific differentiation in shared genomic regions

Version 2 2024-06-03, 01:42
Version 1 2023-11-28, 04:20
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 01:42 authored by NR Hofmeister, KC Stuart, WC Warren, SJ Werner, M Bateson, GF Ball, Kate BuchananKate Buchanan, DW Burt, Adam CardiliniAdam Cardilini, P Cassey, T De Meyer, J George, SL Meddle, HM Rowland, Craig ShermanCraig Sherman, WB Sherwin, W Vanden Berghe, LA Rollins, DF Clayton
AbstractA species' success during the invasion of new areas hinges on an interplay between the demographic processes common to invasions and the specific ecological context of the novel environment. Evolutionary genetic studies of invasive species can investigate how genetic bottlenecks and ecological conditions shape genetic variation in invasions, and our study pairs two invasive populations that are hypothesized to be from the same source population to compare how each population evolved during and after introduction. Invasive European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) established populations in both Australia and North America in the 19th century. Here, we compare whole‐genome sequences among native and independently introduced European starling populations to determine how demographic processes interact with rapid evolution to generate similar genetic patterns in these recent and replicated invasions. Demographic models indicate that both invasive populations experienced genetic bottlenecks as expected based on invasion history, and we find that specific genomic regions have differentiated even on this short evolutionary timescale. Despite genetic bottlenecks, we suggest that genetic drift alone cannot explain differentiation in at least two of these regions. The demographic boom intrinsic to many invasions as well as potential inversions may have led to high population‐specific differentiation, although the patterns of genetic variation are also consistent with the hypothesis that this infamous and highly mobile invader adapted to novel selection (e.g., extrinsic factors). We use targeted sampling of replicated invasions to identify and evaluate support for multiple, interacting evolutionary mechanisms that lead to differentiation during the invasion process.

History

Journal

Molecular Ecology

Pagination

1-16

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0962-1083

eISSN

1365-294X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Wiley

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