(Press-News.org) An incredibly rare hybrid warbler with mismatched color patterns has allowed researchers to disentangle the genetic drivers of two traits that usually come as a package deal--the black face mask and the black throat patch in blue-winged and golden-winged warblers. A new study describing the peculiar bird and pinpointing the location in the genome that controls the face mask and throat patch appears online in the journal Ecology.
"Golden-winged warblers have both a black face mask and a black throat patch, while blue-winged warblers have neither," said Marcella Baiz, postdoctoral researcher at Penn State and first author of the study. "When individuals of each species mate with each other, almost all of their hybrid offspring have matched traits, so both black plumage traits are present or both are absent. But we captured this very weird bird that looks almost entirely like a golden-winged warbler but is missing the black throat patch."
The researchers believe this unique combination occurs in less than 0.5% of the hybrid warblers. To their knowledge, this type of hybrid had been previously documented only once in a bird that was collected in 1934 and described in 1951 from a museum collection.
"We originally found this bird thanks to a tip from a local birder who works at Shaver's Creek Environmental Center," said David Toews, professor of biology at Penn State and an author of the study. "He suggested that a nearby area seemed like good warbler habitat and also uploaded observations of warblers onto the app eBird, which scientists can use in their research. We went to scout the location when we spotted this unique and exciting bird. We carefully captured the bird so we could document its plumage, took a blood sample so we could sequence its genome, and then released it."
In a previous study, the researchers sequenced the genomes of blue- and golden-winged warblers and their hybrids and identified a small region that drives the black coloration in these birds upstream of the Agouti-signaling protein (ASIP) gene. But because the two traits are almost always inherited together, it was unclear if ASIP regulated the traits together or separately.
"Because we already had genome sequencing data from the parent species and hybrids with the matched face and throat color, sequencing the genome of the mismatched bird allowed us to separate out the genetic regions underlying the face mask versus the throat patch," said Baiz.
The team confirmed that the previously identified region is connected to the black throat patch, and also identified a new location--nearby, but further upstream in the genome--that they believe is connected to the black face mask. For black pigment to occur in these birds, the two copies (one on each chromosome) must have originally come from the golden-winged warbler, suggesting that these are "recessive" traits. Having one or both copies from the blue-winged warbler in these spots results in no face mask or throat patch.
"More than a hundred years ago, a biologist named John Treadwell Nichols hypothesized that the black throat coloration was a recessive trait," said Toews. "Later, when Kenneth Parkes described the rare hybrid in 1951, he suggested that if throat and mask color were controlled separately, they would need to be linked in some way or located very close together on the genome. Parkes described his theory as a 'genetic problem for future study,' and we were able to confirm both theories using modern genetic tools."
The researchers suggest that the locations they identified might be located within two separate promoter regions for the ASIP gene, which turn the gene on or off in different contexts. Because they are located so close to each other on the chromosome, the promoters would usually be inherited together--even if genetic material is shuffled between chromosomes during reproduction--which would explain why most hybrids carry both or neither of these black plumage traits. The mismatched bird, however, was likely a result of an extremely rare instance where this was not the case, followed by several generations of backcrossing with golden-winged warblers.
"If coloration genes in warblers have a similar genetic architecture, with multiple promoters controlling where pigment is deposited, it's easy to see how just a few mutations could produce a variety of different color patterns among these songbird species," said Baiz. "This may help explain why there are so many different species of warblers with such a diversity of colors."
Because a warbler's coloration is an important cue for behaviors like mating, it is possible there are implications of the mismatched hybrid bearing only one of the traits. For example, it may be attractive to females of both species because it has qualities of both, or to neither. The researchers hope to observe this bird in the future and determine if it has a mate, and future research linking plumage traits to reproductive success would clarify these implications.
"We have now observed this bird two years in a row, so it has survived at least two migration events," said Toews. "This study and the story of how we found this bird is an excellent example of how birders and citizen scientists can make a real difference in research."
INFORMATION:
In addition to Baiz and Toews, the research team includes Andrew Wood, research technologist at Penn State. The research was supported by the Penn State Eberly College of Science and the Huck Institutes of the Life Science.
Some exoplanet searches could be missing nearly half of the Earth-sized planets around other stars. New findings from a team using the international Gemini Observatory and the WIYN 3.5-meter Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory suggest that Earth-sized worlds could be lurking undiscovered in binary star systems, hidden in the glare of their parent stars. As roughly half of all stars are in binary systems, this means that astronomers could be missing many Earth-sized worlds.
Earth-sized planets may be much more common than previously realized. Astronomers working at NASA Ames Research Center have used the twin telescopes of the international Gemini Observatory, a Program of NSF's NOIRLab, to determine that many planet-hosting ...
WASHINGTON, D.C.--A new study in Annals of Emergency Medicine highlights the importance of protecting physician residents--early-career doctors still in training--and emergency care teams from incidents of physical or verbal abuse.
The survey of 123 physicians, residents, and staff in one emergency department found that 78 percent of all health care workers experienced a violent assault in the prior 12 months, including more than one in five (22 percent) emergency physician residents. Eighty-nine percent of residents experienced verbal assault by a patient in the prior 12 months, compared to 80 percent of other health care workers.
"Violent ...
Philadelphia, June 28, 2021--Researchers at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) have discovered that a specific type of lung cell exhibits unconventional immune properties and may contribute to the outcome of respiratory viral infections. The researchers focused on type II alveolar (AT2) cells, which are non-immune cells of the lung that are critical for basic lung health and tissue repair after lung injury. They found that AT2 cells express high levels of major histocompatibility complex II (MHC-II), an important immune system trigger, and that AT2 MHC-II expression appears to confer an appreciable ...
Researchers at the University of Chicago and the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory have leveraged existing advanced X-ray microscopy techniques to bridge the gap between MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) and electron microscopy imaging, providing a viable pipeline for multiscale whole brain imaging within the same brain. The proof-of-concept demonstration involved imaging an entire mouse brain across five orders of magnitude of resolution, a step which researchers say will better connect existing imaging approaches and uncover new details about the structure of the brain.
The advance, which was published on June 9 in NeuroImage, will allow ...
As social media and other online networking sites have grown in usage, so too has trolling - an internet practice in which users intentionally seek to draw others into pointless and, at times, uncivil conversations.
New research from Brigham Young University recently published in the journal of Social Media and Society sheds light on the motives and personality characteristics of internet trolls.
Through an online survey completed by over 400 Reddit users, the study found that individuals with dark triad personality traits (narcissism, Machiavellianism, psychopathy) combined with schadenfreude - a German word meaning that one derives pleasure from another's misfortune - were more likely to demonstrate trolling behaviors.
"People who exhibit ...
A discovery by a team of researchers, led by a Geisinger professor, could yield a potential new treatment for breast cancer.
In a study published this month in Cell Reports, the team used small molecules known as peptides to disrupt a complex of two proteins, RBM39 and MLL1, that is found in breast cancer cells but not in normal cells.
The research team discovered that the abnormal interaction between RBM39 and MLL1 is required for breast cancer cells to multiply and survive. The team developed non-toxic peptides that prevent these proteins from interacting in breast cancer cells, disrupting their growth and survival.
"Because these proteins do not interact in normal ...
Anxiety, commonly termed as a feeling of fear, dread, and restlessness, is a perfectly normal reaction to stressful situations. However, a state of heightened anxiety, which is the reality for thousands of people who struggle to cope with these feelings, is called anxiety disorder. Anxiety disorder can invoke debilitating fear or apprehension, even without any immediate threat. Though intensive research over the years has yielded a plethora of information, and effective drugs like selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors have been used to alleviate this condition, a lot remains to be understood about this complex condition and ...
The first two COVID-19 vaccines authorized for emergency use by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) employed a technology that had never before been used in FDA-approved vaccines. Both vaccines performed well in clinical trials, and both have been widely credited with reducing disease, but concerns remain over how long immunity induced by the new vaccine technology will last.
Now, a study from researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, published June 28 in the journal Nature, has found evidence that the immune response to such vaccines is both strong and potentially long-lasting. Nearly four months after the first dose, people who received the Pfizer vaccine still had so-called germinal centers in their lymph nodes churning out ...
The use of transparent masks during communication increases comprehension of speech by about 10% for people with hearing loss and people with normal hearing, according to a study published in the journal Ear and Hearing.
The study was conducted at the University of Texas in Dallas (USA), with the participation of Regina Tangerino, a professor at the University of São Paulo's Bauru Dental School (FOB-USP) in Brazil, and with support from São Paulo Research Foundation - FAPESP.
"Our findings show that wearing a transparent mask can facilitate communication for everyone, ...
Hotels that opened their doors to homeless people in their community during lockdown generated greater positive word-of-mouth marketing than those that offered free accommodation to frontline healthcare workers, finds new University research.
However, despite the positive impact on tourists' intentions to share the good news story, the immediate impact on intention to book a visit was the reverse, with people less inclined to book a stay at a hotel that had housed homeless people.
Researchers at the Universities of Bath and Southampton were struck by news reports of the 'heart-warming initiatives' to offer free accommodation and wanted to investigate how they compared in terms of business benefit to the tourism sector.
"Our study found that hotels that ...