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Hummingbird blood traits track oxygen availability across space and time.

Jessie L WilliamsonEthan B LinckEmil BautistaAshley SmileyJimmy A McGuireRobert DudleyChristopher C Witt
Published in: Ecology letters (2023)
Predictable trait variation across environments suggests shared adaptive responses via repeated genetic evolution, phenotypic plasticity or both. Matching of trait-environment associations at phylogenetic and individual scales implies consistency between these processes. Alternatively, mismatch implies that evolutionary divergence has changed the rules of trait-environment covariation. Here we tested whether species adaptation alters elevational variation in blood traits. We measured blood for 1217 Andean hummingbirds of 77 species across a 4600-m elevational gradient. Unexpectedly, elevational variation in haemoglobin concentration ([Hb]) was scale independent, suggesting that physics of gas exchange, rather than species differences, determines responses to changing oxygen pressure. However, mechanisms of [Hb] adjustment did show signals of species adaptation: Species at either low or high elevations adjusted cell size, whereas species at mid-elevations adjusted cell number. This elevational variation in red blood cell number versus size suggests that genetic adaptation to high altitude has changed how these traits respond to shifts in oxygen availability.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • red blood cell
  • single cell
  • genetic diversity
  • stem cells
  • gene expression
  • copy number
  • mesenchymal stem cells