Litcius/Paper detail

Limited domestic introgression in a final refuge of the wild pigeon

W. J. Bernhard Smith, Ashley T. Sendell‐Price, Annette L. Fayet, Teia M. Schweizer, Michał T. Jezierski, Charles van de Kerkhof, Ben C. Sheldon, Kristen Ruegg, Steven Kelly, Lindsay A. Turnbull, Sonya M. Clegg

2022iScience16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Domesticated animals have been culturally and economically important throughout history. Many of their ancestral lineages are extinct or genetically endangered following hybridization with domesticated relatives. Consequently, they have been understudied compared to the ancestral lineages of domestic plants. The domestic pigeon Columba livia, which was pivotal in Darwin’s studies, has maintained outsized cultural significance. Its role as a model organism spans the fields of behavior, genetics, and evolution. Domestic pigeons have hybridized with their progenitor, the Rock Dove, rendering the latter of dubious genetic status. Here, we use genomic and morphological data from the putative Rock Doves of the British Isles to identify relictual undomesticated populations. We reveal that Outer Hebridean Rock Doves have experienced minimal levels of introgression. Our results outline the contemporary status of these wild pigeons, highlighting the role of hybridization in the homogenization of genetic lineages.

Topics & Concepts

IntrogressionDomesticationBiologyEndangered speciesEvolutionary biologyZoologyAncient DNAEcologyGeneticsDemographyGeneSociologyPopulationHabitatGenetic diversity and population structureGenetic and phenotypic traits in livestockPlant Taxonomy and Phylogenetics
Limited domestic introgression in a final refuge of the wild pigeon | Litcius