Nuclear introns help unravel the diversification history of the Australo-Pacific Petroica robins

Cell Nucleus Male Sex Characteristics 0303 health sciences Pacific Ocean Australia Genetic Variation 15. Life on land 16. Peace & justice DNA, Mitochondrial Introns Songbirds Phylogeography 03 medical and health sciences Species Specificity Animals Female Phylogeny
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2018.10.024 Publication Date: 2018-10-25T03:19:30Z
ABSTRACT
Australo-Pacific Petroica robins are known for their striking variability in sexual plumage coloration. Molecular studies in recent years have revised the taxonomy of species and subspecies boundaries across the southwest Pacific and New Guinea. However, these studies have not been able to resolve phylogenetic relationships within Petroica owing to limited sampling of the nuclear genome. Here, we sequence five nuclear introns across all species for which fresh tissue was available. Nuclear loci offer support for major geographic lineages that were first inferred from mtDNA. We find almost no shared nuclear alleles between currently recognized species within the New Zealand and Australian lineages, whereas the Pacific robin radiation has many shared alleles. Multilocus coalescent species trees based on nuclear loci support a sister relationship between the Australian lineage and the Pacific robin radiation-a node that is poorly supported by mtDNA. We also find discordance in support for a sister relationship between the similarly plumaged Rose Robin (P. rosea) and Pink Robin (P. rodinogaster). Our nuclear data complement previous mtDNA studies in suggesting that the phenotypically cryptic eastern and western populations of Australia's Scarlet Robin (P. boodang) are genetically distinct lineages at the early stages of divergence and speciation.
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