How can highly dispersive species give rise to genetically distinct populations? This seemingly paradoxical pattern is common among insular birds, but not in those with continental distributions. Broyles and Myers sequence the genomes of almost 150 individuals from the island-dwelling Pacific swallow (Hirundo tahitica) and its continental counterpart, the welcome swallow (H. neoxena).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe "paradox of the great speciators" has puzzled evolutionary biologists for over half a century. A great speciator requires excellent dispersal propensity to explain its occurrence on multiple islands, but reduced dispersal ability to explain its high number of subspecies. A rapid reduction in dispersal ability is often invoked to solve this apparent paradox, but a proximate mechanism has not been identified yet.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan divergence in a mating trait increase local adaption by increasing ecological divergence? Servedio and Bürger propose that "pseudomagic traits," tightly linked complexes consisting of an ecological locus under divergent selection and a locus acting as a mating cue, can effectively mimic pleiotropy. Such pseudomagic traits can form even when linkage between ecological and mating loci is limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF