Reconciling Gene Tree Discordance and Biogeography in European Crows

ABSTRACT Reconstructing the evolutionary history of young lineages diverging with gene flow is challenging due to factors like incomplete lineage sorting, introgression, and selection causing gene tree discordance. The European crow hybrid zone between all‐black carrion crows and grey‐coated hooded...

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Published inMolecular ecology Vol. 34; no. 10; pp. e17764 - n/a
Main Authors Gwee, Chyi Yin, Metzler, Dirk, Fuchs, Jérôme, Wolf, Jochen B. W.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.05.2025
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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Summary:ABSTRACT Reconstructing the evolutionary history of young lineages diverging with gene flow is challenging due to factors like incomplete lineage sorting, introgression, and selection causing gene tree discordance. The European crow hybrid zone between all‐black carrion crows and grey‐coated hooded crows exemplifies this challenge. Most of the genome in Western and Central European carrion crow populations is near‐identical to hooded crows, but differs substantially from their Iberian congeners. A notable exception is a single major‐effect colour‐locus under sexual selection aligning with the ‘species’ tree. To understand the underlying evolutionary processes, we reconstructed the biogeographic history of the species complex. During the Pleistocene carrion and hooded crows took refuge in the Iberian Peninsula and the Middle East, respectively. Allele‐sharing of all‐black Western European populations with likewise black Iberian crows at the colour‐locus represents the last trace of carrion crow ancestry, resisting gene flow from expanding hooded crow populations that have homogenised most of the genome. A model of colour‐locus introgression from an Iberian ancestor into hooded crow populations near the Pyrenées was significantly less supported. We found no positive relationship between introgression and recombination rate consistent with the absence of genome‐wide, polygenic barriers in this young species complex. Overall, this study portrays a scenario where few large‐effect loci, subject to divergent sexual selection, resist rampant and asymmetric gene exchange. This study underscores the importance of integrating population demography and biogeography to accurately interpret patterns of gene tree discordance following population divergence.
Bibliography:Funding
This research was further made possible by funds from the German Research Foundation (grant WO 14262‐1 to JW) and previous sequencing enabled by the European Research Council (ERCStG‐336536 FuncSpecGen to JW). HPC computing was performed on the BioHPC hosted at Leibniz Rechenzentrum Munich, funded by the German Research Foundation (grant INST 86/2050‐1 FUGG to JW).
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Funding: This research was further made possible by funds from the German Research Foundation (grant WO 14262‐1 to JW) and previous sequencing enabled by the European Research Council (ERCStG‐336536 FuncSpecGen to JW). HPC computing was performed on the BioHPC hosted at Leibniz Rechenzentrum Munich, funded by the German Research Foundation (grant INST 86/2050‐1 FUGG to JW).
Handling Editor: Paul Hohenlohe
ISSN:0962-1083
1365-294X
1365-294X
DOI:10.1111/mec.17764