Abstract

When a species successfully colonizes an urban habitat it can be expected that its population rapidly adapts to the new environment but also experiences demographic perturbations. It is, therefore, essential to gain an understanding of the population structure and the demographic history of the urban and neighbouring rural populations before studying adaptation at the genome level. Here, we investigate populations of the burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia), a species that colonized South American cities just a few decades ago. We assembled a high-quality genome of the burrowing owl and re-sequenced 137 owls from three urban–rural population pairs at 17-fold median sequencing coverage per individual. Our data indicate that each city was independently colonized by a limited number of founders and that restricted gene flow occurred between neighbouring urban and rural populations, but not between urban populations of different cities. Using long-range linkage disequilibrium statistics in an approximate Bayesian computation approach, we estimated consistently lower population sizes in the recent past for the urban populations in comparison to the rural ones. The current urban populations all show reduced standing variation in rare single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), but with different subsets of rare SNPs in different cities. This lowers the potential for local adaptation based on rare variants and makes it harder to detect consistent signals of selection in the genome.

Highlights

  • Urbanization is one of the most prevailing causes of habitat transformation and biodiversity loss worldwide [1]

  • Using genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) data from 137 burrowing owls from three urban-rural population pairs, we found a weak but significant population structure, whereby the three urban populations are genetically distinct from each other and from the rural populations

  • The overall urban-rural population structure indicates that a limited number of founders from the surrounding rural area independently colonized the different cities and that there is no dispersal of individuals between cities

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Summary

Introduction

Urbanization is one of the most prevailing causes of habitat transformation and biodiversity loss worldwide [1]. Urban colonization has been related to intraspecific variation in fear of humans: it has been proposed that urban life selects for individuals with a smaller flight initiation distance upon approach [3,4] This and other phenotypic changes associated with urbanization [5], combined with the lower predation pressure in urban areas [6], can affect the demography and the dispersal propensity of individuals, with consequences for the dynamics and spatial structure of rural and urban populations. For the largest and more intensively monitored city (Bahia Blanca) we sampled 20 individuals from each of two spatially separated suburban areas (BB1urban and BB2urban) to test the robustness of demographic inference based on simulations of 20 individuals (see below) Both urban sites were matched with BBrural.

Buenos Aires –35
Results
Discussion
Findings
27. Oksanen J et al 2018 vegan: community ecology
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