Abstract

Parasites can play a role in speciation, by exerting different selection pressures on different host lineages, leading to reproductive barriers in regions of possible interbreeding. Hybrid zones therefore offer an ideal system to study the effect of parasites on speciation. Here, we study a hybrid zone in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains where two yellow‐rumped warbler subspecies, Setophaga coronata coronata and S. c. auduboni, interbreed. There is partial reproductive isolation between them, but no evidence of strong assortative mating within the hybrid zone, suggesting the existence of a postzygotic selection against hybrids. Here, we test whether haemosporidian parasites might play a role in selecting against hybrids between S. c. coronata and S. c. auduboni. We screened birds from five transects across the hybrid zone for three phylogenetic groupings of avian haemosporidians Plasmodium, Haemoproteus and Leucocytozoon parasites and quantified intensity of infection. Contrary to our prediction, hybrids did not have higher haemosporidian parasite prevalence. Variation in Haemoproteus prevalence was best explained by an interaction between a birds’ hybrid index and elevation, while the probability of infection with Leucocytozoon parasites was only influenced by elevation. We also found no significant difference in the diversity of haemosporidian lineages between the warbler subspecies and their hybrids. Finally, intensity of infection by Haemoproteus increased significantly with elevation, but was not significantly linked to birds’ hybrid index. In conclusion, our data suggest that haemosporidian parasites do not seem to play a major role in selecting against hybrids in this system.

Highlights

  • Parasite-­mediated divergent selection can be a strong and widespread mechanism of ecological speciation (Summers et al, 2003)

  • We broadly sampled a naturally occurring hybrid zone between two yellow-­rumped warbler subspecies to explore the role of parasites in potentially selecting against hybrids

  • We found that haemosporidian parasites—in diversity and prevalence—are unlikely to play a major role in selecting against S. c. coronata × S. c. auduboni hybrids

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Parasite-­mediated divergent selection can be a strong and widespread mechanism of ecological speciation (Summers et al, 2003). Haemosporidian parasites, and in particular avian malaria parasites, are an important model for the study of the evolution of host– parasites relationships Their high diversity (at least 900 lineages, Bensch, Hellgren, & Pérez-­Tris, 2009) and their variability in virulence make them good candidates to investigate parasite-­mediated divergent selection. Haemosporidian parasites are very common in many bird species (Ayadi et al, 2017; van Rooyen, Lalubin, Glaizot, & Christe, 2013; Swanson, Lyons, & Bouzat, 2014) and can reach high prevalence, for example in great tits (Parus major) where prevalence was as high as 91% in some Swiss populations (Glaizot et al, 2012). The data set we used is extensive in sample size and geographic area, composed of five independent transects, which allowed

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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