Dispersal, isolation and local adaptation promote speciation in South
American savannas as indicated by a phylogenomic analysis of a passerine
Abstract
South American savannas are a disjunct biome with an unclear
evolutionary history. We tested hypotheses about their Quaternary
history and evolution of savanna cores through fragmentation or
dispersal from the Cerrado. We used genomic data
(genotyping-by-sequencing) and ecological niche models of the
Burnished-buff Tanager (Stilpnia cayana Linnaeus 1766) to
evaluate intraspecific differentiation, gene flow, past range shifts,
and landscape-genomics association. We found clear genomic differences
between populations on each side of the Amazon basin and high admixture
in the Marajó Island and Bolivia. Landscape genomics analysis indicated
that the Amazon River, isolation by distance and temperature predict
genomic differentiation in this bird. Taken together, the results
suggest that a combination of dispersal from the Cerrado, isolation due
to geographic distance and the Amazon River basin, and local adaptation
shaped the species diversification. We propose considering three
subspecies of S. cayana as full species, with one possibly of
hybrid origin (S. huberi).