Publications by authors named "Rachael Bay"

Article Synopsis
  • Understanding eco-evolutionary feedbacks is crucial as climate change affects global biodiversity, particularly during species range shifts, with two forms of expansion: "pulled" from low-density populations and "pushed" from high-density populations.
  • Research on the owl limpet (Lottia gigantea) during marine heatwaves showed that its poleward expansion was characterized by low genomic differentiation between core and leading-edge populations, indicating a "pushed" wave expansion.
  • The study highlights that extreme climatic events can enhance range expansions and adaptive potential, but trailing-edge populations face challenges due to local selection, limited gene flow, and differences in climatic stability.
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Phenotypic plasticity can buffer organisms against short-term environmental fluctuations. For example, previous exposure to increased temperatures can increase thermal tolerance in many species. Prior studies have found that acclimation to higher temperature can influence the magnitude of transcriptional response to subsequent acute thermal stress (hereafter, "transcriptional response modulation").

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Article Synopsis
  • The Yellow Warbler is a small songbird that's crucial for conserving California's riparian habitats and shows various ecological and physical traits across its range.
  • Researchers have created a detailed genome assembly of a female Yellow Warbler from southern California using advanced sequencing technologies, achieving a 1.22 Gb assembly with high completeness and contiguity.
  • This comprehensive genome resource will help scientists study gene flow and adaptation in Yellow Warblers, ultimately aiding in their conservation management efforts.
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  • Migration in western burrowing owls is influenced by environmental and genetic factors, but the interactions between these drivers need more research.
  • The study reveals distinct genetic structures between resident and migratory populations, with residents showing higher genetic differentiation and inbreeding.
  • Findings suggest that migratory behavior is linked to environmental conditions and specific genes related to fat metabolism, offering important insights for conservation efforts.
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Anthropogenic changes have altered the historical distributions of many North American taxa. As environments shift, ecological and evolutionary processes can combine in complex ways to either stimulate or inhibit range expansion. Here, we examined the role of evolution in a rapid range expansion whose ecological context has been well-documented, Anna's Hummingbird (Calypte anna).

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The extent of parallel genomic responses to similar selective pressures depends on a complex array of environmental, demographic, and evolutionary forces. Laboratory experiments with replicated selective pressures yield mixed outcomes under controlled conditions and our understanding of genomic parallelism in the wild is limited to a few well-established systems. Here, we examine genomic signals of selection in the eelgrass Zostera marina across temperature gradients in adjacent embayments.

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Identifying areas of high evolutionary potential is a judicious strategy for developing conservation priorities in the face of environmental change. For wide-ranging species occupying heterogeneous environments, the evolutionary forces that shape distinct populations can vary spatially. Here, we investigate patterns of genomic variation and genotype-environment associations in the hermit thrush (), a North American songbird, at broad (across the breeding range) and narrow spatial scales (at a hybrid zone).

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Article Synopsis
  • Reef-building coral species are declining due to severe marine heatwaves and bleaching, leading to high mortality rates.
  • Research on 114 coral colonies during a 2015 bleaching event identified genetic differences among four closely related species (HA, HC, HD, HE), particularly in heat tolerance and symbiont relationships.
  • The species HE showed significant genomic differences related to bleaching resistance, with two key loci (HES1 and HES2) linked to resilience, highlighting the genetic factors contributing to coral survival during increasing environmental stress.
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Birds exhibit a remarkable array of seasonal migrations. Despite much research describing migratory behaviour, the underlying forces driving how a species' breeding and wintering populations redistribute each year, that is, migratory connectivity, remain largely unknown. Here, we test the hypothesis that birds migrate in a way that minimises energy expenditure while considering intraspecific competition for energy acquisition, by developing a modelling framework that simulates an optimal redistribution of individuals between breeding and wintering areas.

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Global loss of biodiversity has placed new urgency on the need to understand factors regulating species response to rapid environmental change. While specialists are often less resilient to rapid environmental change than generalists, species-level analyses may obscure the extent of specialization when locally adapted populations vary in climate tolerances. Until recently, quantification of the degree of climate specialization in migratory birds below the species level was hindered by a lack of genomic and tracking information, but recent technological advances have helped to overcome these barriers.

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Habitat loss and alteration has driven many species into decline, often to the point of requiring protection and intervention to avert extinction. Genomic data provide the opportunity to inform conservation and recovery efforts with details about vital evolutionary processes with a resolution far beyond that of traditional genetic approaches. The tricolored blackbird () has suffered severe losses during the previous century largely due to anthropogenic impacts on their habitat.

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For migratory species, seasonal movements complicate local climate adaptation, as it is unclear whether individuals track climate niches across the annual cycle. In the migratory songbird yellow warbler (Setophaga petechia), we find a correlation between individual-level wintering and breeding precipitation, but not temperature. Birds wintering in the driest regions of the Neotropics breed in the driest regions of North America.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers explored how environmental factors, like precipitation, influence the differentiation of the Mangrove Warbler, a subspecies found in Costa Rica, despite the lack of geographic isolation.
  • They used SNPs and physical traits to investigate the relationship between genetic variation and environmental pressures, finding significant links between specific genes and bill morphology related to osmoregulation.
  • The study revealed that phenotypic differences in bill size were much more pronounced than genetic differences, highlighting the role of natural selection in shaping these traits in response to environmental changes.
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As humans cause the redistribution of species ranges, hybridization between previously allopatric species is on the rise. Such hybridization can have complex effects on overall fitness of native species as new allelic combinations are tested. Widespread species introductions provide a unique opportunity to study selection on introgressed alleles in independent, replicated populations.

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Fitzpatrick discuss issues that they had with analyses and interpretation in our recent manuscript on genomic correlates of climate in yellow warblers. We provide evidence that our findings would not change with different analysis and maintain that our study represents a promising direction for integrating the potential for climate adaptation as one of many tools in conservation management.

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Few regions have been more severely impacted by climate change in the USA than the Desert Southwest. Here, we use ecological genomics to assess the potential for adaptation to rising global temperatures in a widespread songbird, the willow flycatcher (Empidonax traillii), and find the endangered desert southwestern subspecies (E. t.

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The ongoing loss of biodiversity caused by rapid climatic shifts requires accurate models for predicting species' responses. Despite evidence that evolutionary adaptation could mitigate climate change impacts, evolution is rarely integrated into predictive models. Integrating population genomics and environmental data, we identified genomic variation associated with climate across the breeding range of the migratory songbird, yellow warbler ().

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Article Synopsis
  • Genetic variation in reef-building corals could help them adapt to warming oceans, but its effectiveness has rarely been measured.
  • In a study of corals in Rarotonga, low-frequency alleles linked to thermal tolerance were found, and simulations indicated that adaptation could occur under mild warming scenarios, allowing population survival.
  • However, under severe warming predictions, rapid adaptation was insufficient to prevent extinction, highlighting the importance of managing climate emissions and using genomic data to understand species' responses to climate change.
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Closely related species often show substantial differences in ecological traits that allow them to occupy different environmental niches. For few of these systems is it clear what the genomic basis of adaptation is and whether a few loci of major effect or many genome-wide differences drive species divergence. Four cryptic species of the tabletop coral Acropora hyacinthus are broadly sympatric in American Samoa; here we show that two common species have differences in key environmental traits such as microhabitat distributions and thermal stress tolerance.

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Ecological speciation with gene flow is widespread in nature [1], but it presents a conundrum: how are associations between traits under divergent natural selection and traits that contribute to assortative mating maintained? Theoretical models suggest that genetic mechanisms inhibiting free recombination between loci underlying these two types of traits (hereafter, "genetic coupling") can facilitate speciation [2-4]. Here, we perform a direct test for genetic coupling by mapping both divergent traits and female mate choice in a classic model of ecological speciation: sympatric benthic and limnetic threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus). By measuring mate choice in F2 hybrid females, we allowed for recombination between loci underlying assortative mating and those under divergent ecological selection.

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Concern over rapid environmental shifts associated with climate change has led to a search for molecular markers of environmental tolerance. Climate-associated gene expression profiles exist for a number of systems, but have rarely been tied to fitness outcomes, especially in nonmodel organisms. We reciprocally transplanted corals between two backreef locations with more and less variable temperature regimes to disentangle effects of recent and native environment on survival and growth.

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Article Synopsis
  • Rapid environmental changes threaten global biodiversity and ecosystem functions, making it essential to understand their effects on individual populations for effective predictions and mitigation.
  • High-throughput sequencing technology allows researchers to analyze genomes for signs of environmental selection, but its application in predicting natural population adaptation is still underutilized compared to its success in agriculture.
  • The review emphasizes the need to integrate genomic data with spatial information, fitness estimates, and plasticity to better understand and model evolutionary responses to environmental changes, which is crucial for predicting the future of species and ecosystems.
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In animals, introgression between species is often perceived as the breakdown of reproductive isolating mechanisms, but gene flow between incipient species can also represent a source for potentially beneficial alleles. Recently, genome-wide datasets have revealed clusters of differentiated loci ('genomic islands of divergence') that are thought to play a role in reproductive isolation and therefore have reduced gene flow. We use simulations to further examine the evolutionary forces that shape and maintain genomic islands of divergence between two subspecies of the migratory songbird, Swainson's thrush (), which have come into secondary contact since the last glacial maximum.

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Population response to environmental variation involves adaptation, acclimation, or both. For long-lived organisms, acclimation likely generates a faster response but is only effective if the rates and limits of acclimation match the dynamics of local environmental variation. In coral reef habitats, heat stress from extreme ocean warming can occur over several weeks, resulting in symbiont expulsion and widespread coral death.

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