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Where is the line? Phylogeography and secondary contact of western Palearctic coal tits (Periparus ater: Aves, Passeriformes, Paridae)

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Citation

Pentzold, S., Tritsch, C., Martens, J., Tietze, D. T., Giacalone, G., Valvo, M. L., et al. (2013). Where is the line? Phylogeography and secondary contact of western Palearctic coal tits (Periparus ater: Aves, Passeriformes, Paridae). Zoologischer Anzeiger, 252(3), 367-382. doi:10.1016/j.jcz.2012.10.003.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0029-3570-9
Abstract
In this study, a phylogeographic scenario of the coal tit (Periparus ater) was reconstructed based on a fragment of the mitochondrial control region, and within- and between-population genetic diversity was analysed with a focus on the western Palearctic breeding range. We inferred a first pan-European delimitation of a postulated secondary contact zone among coal tits from the north-eastern Palearctic ater subspecies group and those from the south-western Palearctic abietum group. Generally, between-population differentiation was greatest in the Mediterranean range, which was explained by a greater separation in multiple Pleistocene refuge areas compared to the lower differentiation across the north-eastern Palearctic range. Genetic diversity indices were lowest on Mediterranean island populations as compared to continental populations. Pairwise ΦST values were highest among island populations and the Eurasian continent on the one hand and among the continental north-eastern ater and south-western abietum group on the other. Local co-occurrence of ater and abietum haplotypes was found all across Germany and in one Greek population. Molecular dating suggested that these two major subspecies groups separated from each other and from two further North African and Middle Eastern coal tit lineages during the early to mid-Pliocene. Successively, the Mediterranean region remained a centre of mainly insular diversification until late Pleistocene times including a long period of steady population growth. At the same time, at least four distinct genetic lineages emerged in eastern Eurasia, the nominate ater subspecies group being one of them. Finally, during the Holocene extant wide-range secondary contact in Europe was established via rapid westward range expansion from an East Asian refuge and via northeastward expansion from Mediterranean refuges.