Genomic Introgression and Adaptation of Southern Seabird Species Facilitate Recent Polar Colonization

Genomic adaptation and introgression can occur during the speciation process, enabling species to diverge in their frequencies of adaptive alleles or acquire new alleles that may promote adaptation to environmental changes. There is limited information on introgression in organisms from extreme environments and their responses to climate change. To address these questions, we focused on the 3 southern skua species, selected for their widespread distribution across the Southern Hemisphere and their complex history of speciation and introgression events. Our genomic data reveal that these skuas underwent diversification around the Penultimate Glacial Period, followed by subsequent demographic expansion. We identified a geographic region of introgression among species that followed a directional pattern sourced from the Antarctic continent, South America, and east to west in subantarctic islands, all converging towards the Antarctic Peninsula. The 3 skua species and admixed individuals exhibited a unique pattern of putative genes under selection, allowing adaptation to extreme conditions. Individuals with a higher proportion of Brown Skua ancestry showed signs of selection on genes related to reproductive isolation, while admixed individuals with a higher proportion of South Polar Skua ancestry displayed patterns resembling those of the South Polar Skua. Introgression may be a key mechanism of adaptation for many species that may help buffer against the ongoing climate change.

Details

Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Jorquera, Josefina ORCIDORCID record for Josefina Jorquera, Morales, Lucila ORCIDORCID record for Lucila Morales, Ng, Elize Y X ORCIDORCID record for Elize Y X Ng, Noll, Daly ORCIDORCID record for Daly Noll, Pertierra, Luis R ORCIDORCID record for Luis R Pertierra, Pliscoff, Patricio ORCIDORCID record for Patricio Pliscoff, Balza, Ulises ORCIDORCID record for Ulises Balza, Boulinier, Thierry ORCIDORCID record for Thierry Boulinier, Gamble, Amandine ORCIDORCID record for Amandine Gamble, Kasinsky, Tatiana ORCIDORCID record for Tatiana Kasinsky, McInnes, Julie C ORCIDORCID record for Julie C McInnes, Marín, Juan Carlos ORCIDORCID record for Juan Carlos Marín, Olmastroni, Silvia ORCIDORCID record for Silvia Olmastroni, Pistorius, Pierre ORCIDORCID record for Pierre Pistorius, Phillips, Richard A. ORCIDORCID record for Richard A. Phillips, González-Solís, Jacob ORCIDORCID record for Jacob González-Solís, Emmerson, Louise ORCIDORCID record for Louise Emmerson, Poulin, Elie ORCIDORCID record for Elie Poulin, Bowie, Rauri C K ORCIDORCID record for Rauri C K Bowie, Burridge, Christopher P ORCIDORCID record for Christopher P Burridge, Vianna, Juliana A ORCIDORCID record for Juliana A Vianna

On this site: Richard Phillips
Date:
20 March, 2025
Journal/Source:
Molecular Biology and Evolution / 42
Page(s):
20pp
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msaf053