A genome-wide assessment of stages of elevational parapatry in Bornean passerine birds reveals no introgression: implications for processes and patterns of speciation

PeerJ. 2017 May 18:5:e3335. doi: 10.7717/peerj.3335. eCollection 2017.

Abstract

Topographically complex regions often contain the close juxtaposition of closely related species along elevational gradients. The evolutionary causes of these elevational replacements, and thus the origin and maintenance of a large portion of species diversity along elevational gradients, are usually unclear because ecological differentiation along a gradient or secondary contact following allopatric diversification can produce the same pattern. We used reduced representation genomic sequencing to assess genetic relationships and gene flow between three parapatric pairs of closely related songbird taxa (Arachnothera spiderhunters, Chloropsis leafbirds, and Enicurus forktails) along an elevational gradient in Borneo. Each taxon pair presents a different elevational range distribution across the island, yet results were uniform: little or no gene flow was detected in any pairwise comparisons. These results are congruent with an allopatric "species-pump" model for generation of species diversity and elevational parapatry of congeners on Borneo, rather than in situ generation of species by "ecological speciation" along an elevational gradient.

Keywords: Borneo; Elevation; Elevational cline; Parapatry; Speciation; Species pump.

Associated data

  • figshare/10.6084/m9.figshare.3205750.v1

Grants and funding

This work was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (DEB-02288688, DEB-1241181, and DEB-1241059), Coypu Foundation of Louisiana, National Geographic Society, Louisiana State University, and The University of Kansas. The KU Genome Sequencing Core (supported by NIH grant 5P20GM103638 to E.A. Lundquist) and the KU Advanced Computing Facility (partially funded by NSF grant CNS 1337899 to A.T. Peterson) granted use of their facilities. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.