Published May 18, 2023 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: An island endemic born out of hybridization between introduced lineages

  • 1. Louisiana State University

Description

Humans have profoundly impacted the distribution of plant and animal species over thousands of years. The most direct example of these effects is human-mediated movement of individuals, either through translocation of individuals within their range or the introduction of species to new habitats. While human involvement may be suspected in species with obvious range disjunctions, it can be difficult to detect natural versus human-mediated dispersal events for populations at the edge of a species' range, and this uncertainty muddles how we understand the evolutionary history of populations and broad biogeographic patterns. Studies combining genetic data with archeological, linguistic, and historical evidence have confirmed prehistoric examples of human-mediated dispersal; however, it is unclear whether these methods can disentangle recent dispersal events, such as species translocated by European colonizers during the past 500 years. We use genomic DNA from historical specimens and historical records to evaluate three hypotheses regarding the timing and origin of Northern Bobwhites (Colinus virginianus) in Cuba, whose status as an endemic or introduced population has long been debated. We discovered that bobwhites from southern Mexico arrived in Cuba between the 12th and 16th centuries, followed by the subsequent introduction of bobwhites from the southeastern USA to Cuba between the 18th and 20th centuries. These dates suggest the introduction of bobwhites to Cuba was human-mediated and concomitant with Spanish colonial shipping routes between Veracruz, Mexico and Havana, Cuba during this period. Our results identify endemic Cuban bobwhites as a genetically distinct population born of hybridization between divergent introduced lineages.

Notes

Funding provided by: National Science Foundation
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000001
Award Number: DEB-1655624

Funding provided by: National Science Foundation
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000001
Award Number: DBI-2109361

Files

README_dryad.md

Files (31.2 GB)

Name Size Download all
md5:9741202f74197b68c38bcb76202bb5b6
168.5 kB Download
md5:9ef3ac7b5160353ccc818ceec9ddfcbe
30.8 GB Download
md5:ec5ea03f0bfea55e5b24a234ca0bf5e9
4.3 MB Download
md5:3abae467af806afc5d1ab3800724d8ad
55.0 kB Download
md5:320879ba73472d4cf67e1592f3fb178d
10.0 MB Download
md5:4090dde189cedc77faf589098705cdb6
354.1 MB Download
md5:62dc13a85903200b114b20ce32d6f550
5.0 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is derived from
10.5281/zenodo.7065366 (DOI)
Is source of
10.5281/zenodo.7734175 (DOI)