Estandía Andrea, Merino Recalde Nilo, Sendell-Price Ashley T, Potvin Dominique A, Goulding William, Robertson Bruce C, Clegg Sonya
Department of Biology, Edward Grey Institute of Field Ornithology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
School of Science, Technology and Engineering, University of the Sunshine Coast, Petrie, Queensland, Australia.
Mol Ecol. 2025 Jul;34(14):e17830. doi: 10.1111/mec.17830. Epub 2025 Jun 11.
Geographic isolation plays a pivotal role in speciation by restricting gene flow between populations through distance or physical barriers. However, the speciation process is complex, influenced by the interplay between dispersal ability and geographic isolation, as seen in "great speciators" - bird species that simultaneously have broad island distributions but high levels of subspecific diversity. Comparing genomic population differentiation in species that occupy both continental and island settings can reveal the effects of different forms of geographic isolation and validate if the primary mechanism proposed to catalyse a great speciator pattern, that is, dispersal reduction following island colonisation, has occurred. The highly diverse white-eye family Zosteropidae includes several great speciators, including the silvereye (Zosterops lateralis), with 16 subspecies (11 occurring on islands), distributed on the Australian continent and numerous southwest Pacific islands. We compared continental and island patterns of divergence using whole genome and morphological data. Australian mainland populations showed a low genetic population structure, lack of isolation by distance patterns and low morphological diagnosability, suggesting that the species' dispersal propensity in a continental setting is sufficient to overcome multiple forms of geographic barriers and large geographic distances. In contrast, except for island populations less than 200 years old, most island populations were highly genomically structured with clearer morphological diagnosability even if separated by relatively short geographic distances. The inferred reduction of dispersal propensity in island situations is consistent with the proposed model of great speciator formation on islands. Our phylogenomic analyses also allowed resolution of the silvereyes' evolutionary position, showing their relatively early emergence (~1.5 Mya) within the rapidly radiating Zosteropidae, while population-level analyses demonstrated where morphological subspecies and genomic data align and disagree. However, the silvereye example also shows how uncertainties about relationships remain when reconstructing evolutionary history in rapidly radiating groups, even when whole genome data is available. Altogether, our results show how within-species genomic and morphological patterns measured over broad spatial scales and with varying geographic contexts can help reveal when particular stages of speciation such as great speciators are likely to emerge.
地理隔离在物种形成过程中起着关键作用,它通过距离或物理屏障限制种群间的基因流动。然而,物种形成过程很复杂,受到扩散能力与地理隔离之间相互作用的影响,这在“超级物种形成者”——鸟类物种中可见一斑,这些鸟类同时具有广泛的岛屿分布和高水平的亚种多样性。比较占据大陆和岛屿环境的物种的基因组种群分化情况,可以揭示不同形式地理隔离的影响,并验证是否发生了被认为促成超级物种形成模式的主要机制,即岛屿殖民后扩散减少。高度多样化的绣眼鸟科包括几个超级物种形成者,其中包括银眼鸟(Zosterops lateralis),有16个亚种(11个分布在岛屿上),分布在澳大利亚大陆和众多西南太平洋岛屿上。我们使用全基因组和形态学数据比较了大陆和岛屿的分化模式。澳大利亚大陆种群显示出低遗传种群结构、缺乏距离隔离模式以及低形态可诊断性,这表明该物种在大陆环境中的扩散倾向足以克服多种形式的地理屏障和大地理距离。相比之下,除了不到200年历史的岛屿种群外,大多数岛屿种群具有高度的基因组结构,即使地理距离相对较短,形态可诊断性也更明显。推断出的岛屿环境中扩散倾向的降低与提出的岛屿上超级物种形成模型一致。我们的系统发育基因组分析还确定了银眼鸟的进化位置,表明它们在快速辐射的绣眼鸟科中相对较早出现(约150万年前),而种群水平分析表明形态亚种和基因组数据在哪些方面一致以及哪些方面不一致。然而,银眼鸟的例子也表明,即使有全基因组数据,在快速辐射的群体中重建进化历史时,关系的不确定性仍然存在。总体而言,我们的结果表明,在广泛的空间尺度和不同的地理背景下测量的物种内基因组和形态模式,有助于揭示诸如超级物种形成者等物种形成的特定阶段可能何时出现。