2019
DOI: 10.1111/mec.15049
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Divergent mitochondrial lineages arose within a large, panmictic population of the Savannah sparrow (Passerculus sandwichensis)

Abstract: Unusual patterns of mtDNA diversity can reveal interesting aspects of a species’ biology. However, making such inferences requires discerning among the many alternative scenarios that could underlie any given mtDNA pattern. Next‐generation sequencing methods provide large, multilocus data sets with increased power to resolve unusual mtDNA patterns. A mtDNA‐based phylogeography of the Savannah sparrow (Passerculus sandwichensis) previously identified two sympatric, but divergent (~2%) clades within the nominate… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…The hypothesized role of selection in shaping patterns of differentiation is not unreasonable given the steep ecological gradients and adaptive challenges associated with freshwater‐saline ecotones (Greenberg et al, 2006; Walsh et al., 2019a). These patterns are notably different, however, from comparisons of tidal marsh Savannah Sparrows in San Francisco Bay, which exhibited low levels of genetic differentiation, even across ecological gradients (Benham & Cheviron, 2019). Pairwise comparisons resulted in the identification of 103 shared SNPs that exhibited elevated signals of differentiation ( F ST greater than 5 SD above the mean).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 56%
“…The hypothesized role of selection in shaping patterns of differentiation is not unreasonable given the steep ecological gradients and adaptive challenges associated with freshwater‐saline ecotones (Greenberg et al, 2006; Walsh et al., 2019a). These patterns are notably different, however, from comparisons of tidal marsh Savannah Sparrows in San Francisco Bay, which exhibited low levels of genetic differentiation, even across ecological gradients (Benham & Cheviron, 2019). Pairwise comparisons resulted in the identification of 103 shared SNPs that exhibited elevated signals of differentiation ( F ST greater than 5 SD above the mean).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 56%
“…Patterns of deep divergence in organellar DNA in combination with shallow nuclear divergence might be due to mitochondrial or plastid capture from an extinct species. [ 8–10 ] However, other demographic and evolutionary processes—including sex‐biased gene flow, [ 11 ] androgenesis, [ 12 ] genetic drift [ 13 ] or independent sorting of haplotypes in a large population [ 14 ] —can culminate in similar patterns. Therefore, it is advisable to rule out these alternative explanations and provide additional evidence for introgression from an extinct lineage, such as signatures of ghost introgression in the nuclear genome.…”
Section: Ghostbusters: Detecting Ghost Introgressionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notwithstanding our speculation that population-level processes (e.g., demographic history; see [56]) likely generated and maintain the two divergent, yet sympatric, mtDNA-based lineages reported here, there may, nonetheless, be consequential impacts on other fields of research for which O. disjunctus is used as model species (see Introduction, and Table 1). For example, deeply divergent intraspecific mtDNA clades can be indicative of corresponding differences in nuclear DNA regions (e.g., [57]).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 73%