The great tit HapMap project: A continental-scale analysis of genomic variation in a songbird

Lewis G. Spurgin, Mirte Bosse, Frank Adriaensen, Tamer Albayrak, Christos Barboutis, Eduardo Belda, Andrey Bushuev, Jacopo G. Cecere, Anne Charmantier, Mariusz Cichon, Niels J. Dingemanse, Blandine Doligez, Tapio Eeva, Kjell Einar Erikstad, Vyacheslav Fedorov, Matteo Griggio, Dieter Heylen, Sabine Hille, Camilla A. Hinde, Elena IvankinaBart Kempenaers, Anvar Kerimov, Milos Krist, Laura Kvist, Veronika N. Laine, Raivo Mänd, Erik Matthysen, Ruedi Nager, Boris P. Nikolov, Ana Claudia Norte, Markku Orell, Jenny Ouyang, Gergana Petrova-Dinkova, Heinz Richner, Diego Rubolini, Tore Slagsvold, Vallo Tilgar, János Török, Barbara Tschirren, Csongor I. Vágási, Teru Yuta, Martien A.M. Groenen, Marcel E. Visser, Kees van Oers, Ben C. Sheldon, Jon Slate*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

A major aim of evolutionary biology is to understand why patterns of genomic diversity vary within taxa and space. Large-scale genomic studies of widespread species are useful for studying how environment and demography shape patterns of genomic divergence. Here, we describe one of the most geographically comprehensive surveys of genomic variation in a wild vertebrate to date; the great tit (Parus major) HapMap project. We screened ca 500,000 SNP markers across 647 individuals from 29 populations, spanning ~30 degrees of latitude and 40 degrees of longitude – almost the entire geographical range of the European subspecies. Genome-wide variation was consistent with a recent colonisation across Europe from a South-East European refugium, with bottlenecks and reduced genetic diversity in island populations. Differentiation across the genome was highly heterogeneous, with clear ‘islands of differentiation’, even among populations with very low levels of genome-wide differentiation. Low local recombination rates were a strong predictor of high local genomic differentiation (FST), especially in island and peripheral mainland populations, suggesting that the interplay between genetic drift and recombination causes highly heterogeneous differentiation landscapes. We also detected genomic outlier regions that were confined to one or more peripheral great tit populations, probably as a result of recent directional selection at the species' range edges. Haplotype-based measures of selection were related to recombination rate, albeit less strongly, and highlighted population-specific sweeps that likely resulted from positive selection. Our study highlights how comprehensive screens of genomic variation in wild organisms can provide unique insights into spatio-temporal evolutionary dynamics.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere13969
JournalMolecular Ecology Resources
Volume24
Issue number5
Early online date15 May 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • adaptation
  • birds
  • ecological genetics
  • genomics/proteomics
  • molecular evolution
  • population genetics – empirical

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