Abstract

Animal migration is a fascinating phenomenon that has puzzled mankind since the time of ancient Greece. It is a process widespread across a varied range of taxa and it shines especially in birds which, because of their mobility, display an amazing diversity of routes and strategies. With the advances in tracking devices and improvements of sequencing technologies, recent work provides support for a strong genetic influence of several migratory traits across different species. However, there is little to no evidence of any common sequence‐based mechanism behind this complex behaviour, nor any unifying principle explaining it. We review how the focus in understanding the genetic basis for migratory traits should be shifted towards studying regulatory mechanisms of gene expression instead of the traditional candidate gene approach. Importantly, a role for gene expression as the underlying driver of the migratory phenotype can resolve the opposing and often strong views that migration is mainly either under genetic or environmental influence. We emphasise that research should take new directions, reinforcing that there is probably not a common genetic basis for how migration is regulated in birds. Here, we support the notion that 1) migration can only evolve this fast if it is a quantitative trait with a large standing variation; 2) the main drivers for migration evolution seem to be diverse expression–regulation mechanisms rather than gene‐level polymorphisms; and 3) non‐coding sequences of the genome, epigenetics and structural variation might be more important in shaping complex traits than previously thought. Further, we present several hypotheses outlining how these regulatory mechanisms might work across different bird species defining certain migratory traits.

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