Lineage diversity in a widely distributed New World passerine bird, the House Wren

Abstract We explored the evolutionary radiation in the House Wren complex (Troglodytes aedon and allies), the New World’s most widely distributed passerine species. The complex has been the source of ongoing taxonomic debate. To evaluate phenotypic variation in the House Wren complex, we collected 8...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ornithology
Main Authors: Klicka, John, Epperly, Kevin, Smith, Brian Tilston, Spellman, Garth M, Chaves, Jaime A, Escalante, Patricia, Witt, Christopher C, Canales-del-Castillo, Ricardo, Zink, Robert M
Other Authors: DEB
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press (OUP) 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ornithology/ukad018
https://academic.oup.com/auk/advance-article-pdf/doi/10.1093/ornithology/ukad018/50465030/ukad018.pdf
https://academic.oup.com/auk/article-pdf/140/3/ukad018/50877209/ukad018.pdf
Description
Summary:Abstract We explored the evolutionary radiation in the House Wren complex (Troglodytes aedon and allies), the New World’s most widely distributed passerine species. The complex has been the source of ongoing taxonomic debate. To evaluate phenotypic variation in the House Wren complex, we collected 81,182 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from restriction site associated loci (RADseq) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from samples representing the taxonomic and geographic diversity of the complex. Both datasets reveal deep phylogeographic structuring, with several topological discrepancies. The trees highlight the evolutionary distinctiveness of eastern and western T. aedon, which were sister taxa in the SNP tree and paraphyletic on the mtDNA tree. The RADseq data reveal a distinct T. a. brunneicollis group, although STRUCTURE plots suggest admixture between western T. aedon and northern Mexican samples of T. a. brunneicollis. MtDNA data show a paraphyletic arrangement of T. a. musculus on the tree, whereas the SNP tree portrays them as monophyletic. Island taxa are distinct in both datasets, including T. a. beani (Isla Cozumel), which appears derived from T. a. musculus in eastern Mexico, and T. sissonii (Isla Socorro) and T. tanneri (Isla Clarión) although the 2 datasets disagree on their overall phylogenetic placement. Although we had only mtDNA data for T. a. martinicensis from the Lesser Antilles, we found at least 4 distinct and paraphyletic taxa from Trinidad, Granada, St. Vincent islands, and Dominica. The House Wren complex showed strong differentiation in mtDNA and RADseq datasets, with conflicting patterns likely arising from some combination of sex-biased dispersal, incomplete lineage sorting, or selection on mtDNA. The most glaring discrepancies between these 2 datasets, such as the paraphyly of eastern and western North American House Wrens in the mtDNA tree, present excellent opportunities for follow-up studies on evolutionary mechanisms that underpin phylogeographic patterns.