Transspecies beak color polymorphism in the Darwins finch radiation Institutional Repository Document uri icon

abstract

  • AbstractCarotenoid-based polymorphisms are widespread in populations of birds, fish, and reptiles1, but little is known of how they affect fitness and are maintained as species multiply2. We report a combined field and molecular-genetic investigation of a nestling beak color polymorphism in Darwins finches. Beaks are pink or yellow, and yellow is recessive3. Here we show that the polymorphism arose in the Galpagos approximately half a million years ago through a regulatory mutation in theBCO2gene, and is shared by 14 descendant species. The frequency of the yellow genotype is associated with cactus flower abundance in cactus finches, and is altered by introgressive hybridization. The polymorphism is most likely a balanced polymorphism, maintained by ecological selection pressures associated with diet, and augmented by occasional interspecific introgression. Polymorphisms that are hidden as adults, as here, may contribute to evolutionary diversification in underappreciated ways in other systems.

altmetric score

  • 19.3

author list (cited authors)

  • Enbody, E. D., Sprehn, C. G., Abzhanov, .., Bi, H., Dobreva, M. P., Osborne, O. G., ... Andersson, L.

citation count

  • 2

complete list of authors

  • Enbody, Erik D||Sprehn, C Grace||Bi, Huijuan||Dobreva, Mariya P||Osborne, Owen G||Rubin, Carl-Johan||Grant, Peter R||Grant, B Rosemary||Andersson, Leif

Book Title

  • bioRxiv

publication date

  • January 2021