Epigenetic Potential and Dispersal Propensity in a Free‐Living Songbird: A Spatial and Temporal Approach
Blanca Jimeno, Marianthi Tangili, Julio C. Domínguez, David Canal, Carlos Camacho, Jaime Potti, Jesús T. García, Jesús Martínez‐Padilla, Mark Ravinet

TL;DR
This study explores how epigenetic potential influences dispersal behavior in songbirds over time and space.
Contribution
The study introduces epigenetic potential as a novel factor influencing dispersal propensity in a free-living bird population.
Findings
Epigenetic potential is positively associated with dispersal propensity in female birds and across generations.
CpG variants are non-randomly distributed in the genome, with higher frequency in promoters and exons.
The findings suggest epigenetic plasticity facilitates environmental adaptation and dispersal in wild birds.
Abstract
Natal dispersal is a key life history trait determining fitness and driving population dynamics, genetic structure, and species distributions. Despite existing evidence that not all phenotypes are equally likely to successfully establish in new areas, the mechanistic underpinnings of natal dispersal remain poorly understood. The propensity to disperse into a new environment can be favoured by a high degree of phenotypic plasticity, which facilitates local adaptation and may be achieved via epigenetic mechanisms, which modify gene expression and enable rapid phenotypic changes. Epigenetic processes occur in particular genomic regions—DNA methylation on CpG sites in vertebrates—and thus individual genomes may differ in their capacity to be modified epigenetically. This ‘Epigenetic potential’ (EP) may represent the range of phenotypic plasticity attainable by an individual and be a key…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsAvian ecology and behavior · Animal Behavior and Reproduction · Genetic diversity and population structure
