# Comparative Whole Genome Phylogeography Reveals Genetic Distinctiveness of Appalachian Populations of Boreal Songbirds

**Authors:** Abigail A. Kimmitt, Teresa M. Pegan, Kristen S. Wacker, Andrew W. Jones, Benjamin M. Winger

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/eva.70163 · Evolutionary Applications · 2025-10-15

## TL;DR

This study finds that Appalachian populations of boreal songbirds are genetically distinct from boreal populations, despite similar genetic diversity levels.

## Contribution

The study uses whole genome data from 12 bird species to reveal consistent phylogeographic patterns in the Appalachian region.

## Key findings

- 11 of 12 species showed genetic distinction between Appalachian and boreal populations.
- Appalachian populations had similar genetic diversity to boreal populations despite smaller geographic range.
- No shared signatures of selection were found across species, indicating species-specific divergence.

## Abstract

Intraspecific genetic diversity across a species' geographic range is relevant to adaptive potential and long‐term population persistence, and identifying genetically distinct groups within species can direct management decisions focused on conserving species‐level genetic diversity. Comparative phylogeography using whole genome techniques allows for investigation of whether co‐distributed species exhibit shared spatial genetic differentiation at fine spatial scales, thereby facilitating a comparative approach to both landscape and conservation genetics. By sequencing over 900 low‐coverage whole genomes, we evaluated the concordance of genetic structure and diversity from 12 co‐occurring species of migratory birds whose breeding ranges span adjacent North American ecogeographic regions: the vast boreal forest belt and the temperate montane Appalachian forests. We detected concordant phylogeographic patterns in 11 of 12 species wherein populations from the southern Appalachians were genetically distinct from boreal belt populations. Our results reveal that small populations persisting in the southern Appalachian Mountains consistently harbor genetic diversity that is subtly distinct from much larger, widespread boreal populations of the same species. However, in most species, levels of standing genetic diversity were not significantly different between Appalachian and boreal populations despite the drastic difference in geographic extent of these populations. We found no evidence for shared signatures of selection across the genome, suggesting that the concordance of spatial genetic structure across species emerges from species‐specific patterns of molecular divergence across the genome rather than parallel patterns of selection. Conservation of the Appalachian ecosystem would likely support maintenance of distinct genetic diversity in several migratory avian species with widespread distributions.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** ND2 [NCBI Gene 3674087]
- **Diseases:** inflammatory (MESH:D007249), thrush (MESH:D002180)
- **Chemicals:** ethanol (MESH:D000431), gold (MESH:D006046), Ice (MESH:D007053), PRJNA1130443 (-), proton (MESH:D011522)
- **Species:** Vireo solitarius (solitary vireo, species) [taxon 34950], Siganus guttatus (golden rabbitfish, species) [taxon 92439], Magnolia grandiflora (southern magnolia, species) [taxon 3406], Cardellina canadensis (Canada warbler, species) [taxon 182910], Regulus satrapa (golden-crowned kinglet, species) [taxon 13245], Conopholis americana (species) [taxon 4179], Setophaga fusca (Blackburnian warbler, species) [taxon 240591], Siganus fuscescens (mottled spinefoot, species) [taxon 225757], Sphyrapicus varius (yellow-bellied sapsucker, species) [taxon 56079], Certhia americana (species) [taxon 186443], Junco hyemalis (dark-eyed junco, species) [taxon 40217], Setophaga magnolia (Magnolia warbler, species) [taxon 92121], Setophaga coronata (yellow-rumped warbler, species) [taxon 111975], Picoides villosus (Hairy woodpecker, species) [taxon 51356], Setophaga caerulescens (black-throated blue warbler, species) [taxon 231566], Dryobates pubescens (Downy woodpecker, species) [taxon 118200], Troglodytes hiemalis (Eastern winter wren, species) [taxon 1716593], Catharus guttatus (hermit thrush, species) [taxon 9185], Catharus ustulatus (Swainson's thrush, species) [taxon 91951], Catharus fuscescens (veery, species) [taxon 159581], Setophaga virens (black-throated green warbler, species) [taxon 92124], Syagrus coronata (species) [taxon 682621]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12528544/full.md

## References

107 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12528544/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12528544