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Disentangling the complex evolutionary history of the Western Palearctic blue tits (Cyanistes spp.) – phylogenomic analyses suggest radiation by multiple colonization events and subsequent isolation
Authors:Martin Stervander  Juan Carlos Illera  Laura Kvist  Pedro Barbosa  Naomi P Keehnen  Peter Pruisscher  Staffan Bensch  Bengt Hansson
Affiliation:1. Molecular Ecology and Evolution Lab, Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden;2. Research Unit of Biodiversity (UO‐CSIC‐PA), Oviedo University, Mieres, Asturias, Spain;3. Department of Biology, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland
Abstract:Isolated islands and their often unique biota continue to play key roles for understanding the importance of drift, genetic variation and adaptation in the process of population differentiation and speciation. One island system that has inspired and intrigued evolutionary biologists is the blue tit complex (Cyanistes spp.) in Europe and Africa, in particular the complex evolutionary history of the multiple genetically distinct taxa of the Canary Islands. Understanding Afrocanarian colonization events is of particular importance because of recent unconventional suggestions that these island populations acted as source of the widespread population in mainland Africa. We investigated the relationship between mainland and island blue tits using a combination of Sanger sequencing at a population level (20 loci; 12 500 nucleotides) and next‐generation sequencing of single population representatives (>3 200 000 nucleotides), analysed in coalescence and phylogenetic frameworks. We found (i) that Afrocanarian blue tits are monophyletic and represent four major clades, (ii) that the blue tit complex has a continental origin and that the Canary Islands were colonized three times, (iii) that all island populations have low genetic variation, indicating low long‐term effective population sizes and (iv) that populations on La Palma and in Libya represent relicts of an ancestral North African population. Further, demographic reconstructions revealed (v) that the Canary Islands, conforming to traditional views, hold sink populations, which have not served as source for back colonization of the African mainland. Our study demonstrates the importance of complete taxon sampling and an extensive multimarker study design to obtain robust phylogeographical inferences.
Keywords:back colonization  Canary Islands  coalescence  colonization  isolation  phylogeography  RAD sequencing  radiation
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