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  4. Genomic consequences of colonisation, migration and genetic drift in barn owl insular populations of the eastern Mediterranean
 
research article

Genomic consequences of colonisation, migration and genetic drift in barn owl insular populations of the eastern Mediterranean

Machado, Ana Paula
•
Topaloudis, Alexandros
•
Cumer, Tristan
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2022
Molecular Ecology

The study of insular populations was key in the development of evolutionary theory. The successful colonisation of an island depends on the geographic context, and specific characteristics of the organism and the island, but also on stochastic processes. As a result, apparently identical islands may harbour populations with contrasting histories. Here, we use whole genome sequences of 65 barn owls to investigate the patterns of inbreeding and genetic diversity of insular populations in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. We focus on Crete and Cyprus, islands with similar size, climate and distance to mainland, that provide natural replicates for a comparative analysis of the impacts of microevolutionary processes on isolated populations. We show that barn owl populations from each island have a separate origin, Crete being genetically more similar to other Greek islands and mainland Greece, and Cyprus more similar to the Levant. Further, our data show that their respective demographic histories following colonisation were also distinct. On the one hand, Crete harbours a small population and maintains very low levels of gene flow with neighbouring populations. This has resulted in low genetic diversity, strong genetic drift, increased relatedness in the population and remote inbreeding. Cyprus, on the other hand, appears to maintain enough gene flow with the mainland to avoid such an outcome. Our study provides a comparative population genomic analysis of the effects of neutral processes on a classical island-mainland model system. It provides empirical evidence for the role of stochastic processes in determining the fate of diverging isolated populations.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/mec.16324
Author(s)
Machado, Ana Paula
Topaloudis, Alexandros
Cumer, Tristan
Lavanchy, Eléonore
Bontzorlos, Vasileios
Ceccherelli, Renato
Charter, Motti
Kassinis, Nicolaos
Lymberakis, Petros
Manzia, Francesca
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Date Issued

2022

Published in
Molecular Ecology
Volume

31

Issue

5

Start page

1375

End page

1388

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
BICC  
Available on Infoscience
April 12, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/196944
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