首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Stepwise colonization of the Andes by Ruddy Ducks and the evolution of novel β‐globin variants
Authors:V. Muñoz‐Fuentes  M. Cortázar‐Chinarro  M. Lozano‐Jaramillo  K. G. McCracken
Affiliation:1. Estación Biológica de Do?ana‐CSIC, , 41092 Sevilla, Spain;2. Department of Population and Conservation Biology, Uppsala University, , 752 36 Uppsala, Sweden;3. Laboratorio de Biología Evolutiva de Vertebrados, Departamento de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad de Los Andes, , 4976 Bogotá, Colombia;4. Department of Biology and Wildlife, Institute of Arctic Biology, University of Alaska Museum, University of Alaska Fairbanks, , Fairbanks, Alaska, 99775 USA
Abstract:Andean uplift played a key role in Neotropical bird diversification, yet past dispersal and genetic adaptation to high‐altitude environments remain little understood. Here we use multilocus population genetics to study population history and historical demographic processes in the ruddy duck (Oxyura jamaicensis), a stiff‐tailed diving duck comprising three subspecies distributed from Canada to Tierra del Fuego and inhabiting wetlands from sea level to 4500 m in the Andes. We sequenced the mitochondrial DNA, four autosomal introns and three haemoglobin genes (αA, αD, βA) and used isolation‐with‐migration (IM) models to study gene flow between North America and South America, and between the tropical and southern Andes. Our analyses indicated that ruddy ducks dispersed first from North America to the tropical Andes, then from the tropical Andes to the southern Andes. While no nonsynonymous substitutions were found in either α globin gene, three amino acid substitutions were observed in the βA globin. Based on phylogenetic reconstruction and power analysis, the first βA substitution, found in all Andean individuals, was acquired when ruddy ducks dispersed from low altitude in North America to high altitude in the tropical Andes, whereas the two additional substitutions occurred more recently, when ruddy ducks dispersed from high altitude in the tropical Andes to low altitude in the southern Andes. This stepwise colonization pattern accompanied by polarized βA globin amino acid replacements suggest that ruddy ducks first acclimatized or adapted to the Andean highlands and then again to the lowlands. In addition, ruddy ducks colonized the Andean highlands via a less common route as compared to other waterbird species that colonized the Andes northwards from the southern cone of South America.
Keywords:coalescent  haemoglobin  high‐altitude  hypoxia  introns  isolation with migration  mtDNA  Patagonia  stiff‐tailed ducks  waterfowl
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号