NYU Abu Dhabi Researchers Unlock Keys To Falcons’ Evolutionary Success, Offering New Clues About How Birds And Mammals Evolve

Press release
Published June 30th, 2022 - 11:23 GMT

NYU Abu Dhabi Researchers Unlock Keys To Falcons’ Evolutionary Success, Offering New Clues About How Birds And Mammals Evolve
Falcons are an ideal model for studying the process of evolution as there is an ongoing emergence of new falcon species and extreme variation in environments and habitats that falcons occupy.
Highlights
The new findings point to how - and why - new species emerge and adapt to their environments

By studying the genomic architecture of several falcon species, a team of researchers at NYU Abu Dhabi (NYUAD), led by Postdoctoral Associate and evolutionary biologist Justin Wilcox, have discovered a strong link between how a genome is structured and how a species evolves. The researchers’ newly-developed falcon genomes and findings of unique evolutionary patterns in falcons could make falcons a model for the study of the links between genomic evolution, speciation, and environmental adaption.

Falcons are an ideal model for studying the process of evolution as there is an ongoing emergence of new falcon species and extreme variation in environments and habitats that falcons occupy. Additionally, falcons have a unique genomic arrangement relative to other animals, including other birds. Falcons are incredibly important to MENA culture, commerce, and conservation; this study’s findings suggest that falcons may also have a special role to play in illuminating how and why genetic material is organized in the way that it is.

In a new paper titled “Linked-Read Sequencing of Eight Falcons Reveals a Unique Genomic Architecture in Flux,” Wilcox and colleagues present new genomes for eight falcons and analyze how the unique genomic structure of falcons has influenced their evolution. The researchers found that falcon genomes are now evolving in a way that is more similar to processes observed in mammals: specifically, they report falcons as the first birds that demonstrate an evolutionary process known as AT-GC disequilibrium, which is previously only well-documented in mammals.

The team sequenced the genome of the lanner falcon for the first time in the species’ history, in addition to producing two new genomes for gyrfalcons, three new genomes for peregrine falcons – including the first-ever reference genomes for two peregrine subspecies -- and a new genome for the saker falcon and the common kestrel. Together, these species represent all the falcon species most commonly used in falconry. The new genomes are publicly available on NCBI Genbank.

“Falcons are unique in the speed and success with which they have spread across the globe and colonized new environments. Our findings highlight that their evolution is also unique among birds at the molecular level,” said Wilcox. “This research also leads the way for the future study of falcon genomes to improve ancestry tests and hybrid detection, genomic trait mapping, and determination of genomic differences between species.”

Background Information

New York University Abu Dhabi

NYU's agreement with the Emirate of Abu Dhabi to create NYU Abu Dhabi is the outcome of a shared understanding of the essential roles and challenges of higher education in the 21st century: a common belief in the value of a liberal arts education, concurrence on the benefits a research university brings to the society that sustains it, a conviction that interaction with new ideas and people who are different is valuable and necessary, and a commitment to educating students who are true citizens of the world.

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