
Quantifying adaptive divergence of the snowfinches in a common landscape
Author(s) -
She Huishang,
Jiang Zhiyong,
Song Gang,
Ericson Per G. P.,
Luo Xu,
Shao Shimiao,
Lei Fumin,
Qu Yanhua
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
diversity and distributions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.918
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1472-4642
pISSN - 1366-9516
DOI - 10.1111/ddi.13383
Subject(s) - sympatric speciation , biology , evolutionary biology , adaptation (eye) , divergence (linguistics) , genetic divergence , phenotypic trait , sympatry , genetic architecture , niche , phenotype , ecology , genetics , gene , genetic diversity , population , philosophy , linguistics , sociology , demography , neuroscience
Aim Species living in a shared environment face similar selective pressures and often evolve adaptive divergence to avoid competition. Quantifying phenotypic divergence and its genetic parallelism among sympatric species is important for understanding of ecologically moderated biodiversity. Here, we integrate ecologic, phenotypic and genomic datasets to study to what extent three sympatrically snowfinches ( Montifringilla adamsi , Pyrgilauda ruficollis and Onychostruthus taczanowskii ) differ in their adaptations in order to co‐exist in a shared environment. Location Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau. Methods We used principal component analysis to summarize and compare environmental and phenotypic divergence. We compared phenotypes relevant to body and beak sizes ( n = 68) because they are indicators of niche and food segregation, thus critical for establishing co‐existence of sympatric birds. We used comparative genomics ( n = 33) to identify genetic loci that are highly divergent between species as well as loci unique for each of species. Using vector analyses, we integrated correlation and permutation to quantify parallelism between phenotypic and genetic divergences. Results We found that body and beak sizes are significantly different among three snowfinches. The phenotypic differentiations are greater in species that share similar ecological conditions than in those that do not. We showed that genes related to developmental process are over‐represented within highly divergent genomic regions and unique genetic loci of each species. We found that the extent of phenotypic divergence between snowfinch pairs is more strongly correlated with the magnitude of divergence in developmental genes than in the whole genome. Main conclusions Adaptive divergence of sympatric snowfinches is highly constrained on developmental genes. As this genetic divergence is strongly correlated with divergence of the traits related to segregation in niche and food resources, this correlation reflects either causal effects or indirect consequences of ecological mediated changes. Our study provides novel insights into the mechanisms underlying evolutionary versatility and ecological success among sympatric species.