Thirty-six years ago, an unfamiliar schnoz popped up on Daphne Major.
Over the past four decades, have identified and banded every finch that lives on this tiny, dog-bowl-shaped isle in . So, in 1981, when a member of their research team noticed a young male with an imposing beak and a strange song, the Princeton University scientists instantly knew it was out of place. A blood sample confirmed their hunch: The bird was an 贰蝉辫补帽辞濒a Cactus-Finch, and it had crossed miles of ocean to mingle with the local Medium Ground-Finches.
And that鈥檚 how the latest, most bizarre case of finch evolution began: with a wanderer and then a bang. The exotic male from 贰蝉辫补帽辞濒a island quickly mated with a native female, giving rise to a group of stocky-beaked finches that biologists dubbed the 鈥淏ig Bird鈥 lineage. After just three generations, the Big Birds started pairing up with hybrids exclusively, and are now on their way to forming a new species, reveals.
The culprit behind this evolutionary shift is the that鈥檚 been documented time and time again in the Galapagos, Sangeet Lamichhaney, the lead author of the Science paper and former genomics student at Sweden鈥檚 Uppsala University, says. The descendants of the 贰蝉辫补帽辞濒a Cactus-Finch are well endowed bill-wise; by interbreeding, they can ensure that their offspring have an edge when it comes to foraging for fruits and seeds. Every year during the study, hybrids on Daphne Major were born with deeper beaks and had higher rates of survival; in 2009, for example, all 19 survivors measured thicker bills than the five that died. (Similar patterns have been seen in much larger sample sizes on Daphne Major.)
Through their rapid transformation 鈥渢he finches are redefining speciation,鈥 Lamichhaney says. He notes that the universal theory of evolution hasn鈥檛 changed much in the last two centuries: It still leans on geographic isolation and the ability for organisms to interbreed and produce fertile offspring. But with the Big Birds, 鈥渢he most important criteria is not whether they can breed with others; it鈥檚 if they do,鈥 Lamichhaney says. What's more, because the Galapagos finches lack flashy feathers, they largely rely on song recognition to pick out their mates. The same goes for the Big Birds, which are more in tune with 贰蝉辫补帽辞濒a Cactus-Finches. And so, they've been pushed into a reproductive bubble, even while living side by side with Medium Ground-Finches.
The result? One of the only known examples of speciation triggered by hybrid vertebrates. While hybridization does occur among plants and animals鈥攂irds are especially susceptible because of their mobility鈥攊t rarely gives rise to a unique species. The Big Birds, however, are living proof that a mashup can evolve into something deeper.
This was all unexpected for Lamichhaney, who initially joined the Grants鈥 real-time experiment to find out how bill size and shape are determined on the molecular level. He answered that 鈥渕illion-dollar question鈥 in 2015, when he in several species of Galapagos finches. A year later, he found key differences in the same regions of DNA between Big Bird hybrids and their parent species. Humans and fish have the 鈥渂eak gene鈥 pair, too, Lamichhaney says; though in them, it can lead to severe facial defects.
But there are further reasons why birds sport a vast collection of beaks. As the Grants and other scientists have shown, environmental catastrophes, limited eats, and competition between species can play a sizable role. For instance, Channel Island Song Sparrows have adapted to their dry California climate by growing bigger beaks, allowing them without losing water. These external conditions help control how beak-specific genes operate, Maybellene Gamboa, a doctoral researcher at Colorado State University, says.
After doing tangential work with , Gamboa is excited to see a fresh discovery emerge from the Galapagos. 鈥The beak is so ecologically important and complex; we need to keep investigating its genomic architecture to find more compelling examples like Sangeet鈥檚,鈥 she says. Lucky for her, Lamichhaney is still hooked. In a few months he鈥檚 embarking on his first trip to Daphne Major, where he will join his old advisor Leif Andersson and the Grants to collect and decode DNA from the latest Big Bird generation. 鈥淧eople say Darwin鈥檚 finches represent the old and classic system鈥攖hat there鈥檚 nothing new to study,鈥 Lamichhaney says. 鈥淲ell, I say I鈥檒l be surprised if I鈥檓 not surprised again.鈥