Publications by authors named "Z Gompert"

Karst ecosystems often contain extraordinary biodiversity, but the complex underground aquifers of karst regions present challenges for assessing and conserving stygobiont diversity and investigating their evolutionary history. We examined the karst-obligate salamanders of the species complex in the Edwards Plateau region of central Texas using population genomics data to address questions about population connectivity and the potential for gene exchange within the underlying aquifer system. The species complex has historically been divided into three nominal species, but their status, and spatial extent of species ranges, have remained uncertain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite the well-known effects of sexual selection on phenotypes, links between this evolutionary process and reproductive isolation, genomic divergence, and speciation have been difficult to establish. We unravel the genetic basis of sexually selected plumage traits to investigate their effects on reproductive isolation in barn swallows. The genetic architecture of sexual traits is characterized by 12 loci on two autosomes and the Z chromosome.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Hybrid zones, where different species interbreed, provide key insights into how species form and evolve.
  • The new R package, bgchm, enhances population genomic analysis of these hybrid zones by improving Bayesian methods for estimating ancestry and genetic patterns.
  • bgchm offers accurate parameter estimation and can discern the roles of selection and genetic drift in introgression, while also addressing the limitations and future potential of genomic cline analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Understanding how mutations arise and spread through individuals and populations is fundamental to evolutionary biology. Most organisms have a life cycle with unicellular bottlenecks during reproduction. However, some organisms like plants, fungi, or colonial animals can grow indefinitely, changing the manner in which mutations spread throughout both the individual and the population.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF