Abstract

The Mexican Sheartail (Doricha eliza), an endangered hummingbird, is endemic to Mexico where two populations have a disjunct distribution. One population is distributed along the northern tip of the Yucatan Peninsula whereas the other is mostly restricted to central Veracruz. Despite their disjunct distribution, previous work has failed to detect morphological or behavioral differences between these populations. Here we use variation in morphology, mtDNA and nuDNA sequences to determine the degree of morphological and molecular divergence between populations, their divergence time, and historical demography. We use species distribution modeling and niche divergence tests to infer the relative roles of vicariance and dispersal in driving divergence in the genus. Our Bayesian and maximum likelihood phylogenetic analyses revealed that Doricha eliza populations form a monophyletic clade and support their sister relationship with D. enicura. We found marked genetic differentiation, with reciprocal monophyly of haplotypes and highly restricted gene flow, supporting a history of isolation over the last 120,000 years. Genetic divergence between populations is consistent with the lack of overlap in environmental space and slight morphological differences between males. Our findings indicate that the divergence of the Veracruz and Yucatan populations is best explained by a combination of a short period of isolation exacerbated by subsequent divergence in climate conditions, and that rather than vicariance, the two isolated ranges of D. eliza are the product of recent colonization and divergence in isolation.

Highlights

  • The Mexican Sheartail Hummingbird (Doricha eliza) is an endemic to Mexico, and globally is a near threatened species according to the IUCN Red List [1]

  • The level of polymorphism found in the Mellisugini of the nuclear 20454 locus was low and several haplotypes were shared among species

  • The relationship between D. eliza and D. enicura is retrieved with high support in both the Bayesian inference (BI) and maximum likelihood (ML) analyses (PP = 0.99, bootstrap = 98%), and monophyly of sheartails is retrieved with high support (PP = 1.0, bootstrap = 99%)

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Summary

Introduction

The Mexican Sheartail Hummingbird (Doricha eliza) is an endemic to Mexico, and globally is a near threatened species according to the IUCN Red List [1] It is locally endangered with population declines owing to habitat loss and degradation [2], and is facing risk of extinction in the wild. These hummingbirds of the monophyletic assemblage Mellisugini [3], known as bees, and were originally included in the genus Trochilus [4]. Geographic distance as a driver of the divergence between the two populations of Mexican Sheartail in isolation, has not been investigated This question is important because each population is facing different threats and in a different environment, requiring locally adapted conservation schemes

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