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Dive into the research topics where Josselin Cornuault is active.

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Featured researches published by Josselin Cornuault.


Heredity | 2014

Extremely reduced dispersal and gene flow in an island bird

Joris A. M. Bertrand; Yann X. C. Bourgeois; Boris Delahaie; Thomas Duval; Ricardo García-Jiménez; Josselin Cornuault; Philipp Heeb; Borja Milá; Benoit Pujol; Christophe Thébaud

The Réunion grey white-eye, Zosterops borbonicus, a passerine bird endemic to Réunion Island in the Mascarene archipelago, represents an extreme case of microgeographical plumage colour variation in birds, with four distinct colour forms occupying different parts of this small island (2512 km2). To understand whether such population differentiation may reflect low levels of dispersal and gene flow at a very small spatial scale, we examined population structure and gene flow by analysing variation at 11 microsatellite loci among four geographically close localities (<26 km apart) sampled within the distribution range of one of the colour forms, the brown-headed brown form. Our results revealed levels of genetic differentiation that are exceptionally high for birds at such a small spatial scale. This strong population structure appears to reflect low levels of historical and contemporary gene flow among populations, unless very close geographically (<10 km). Thus, we suggest that the Réunion grey white-eye shows an extremely reduced propensity to disperse, which is likely to be related to behavioural processes.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2013

Mass production of SNP markers in a nonmodel passerine bird through RAD sequencing and contig mapping to the zebra finch genome

Yann X. C. Bourgeois; Emeline Lhuillier; Timothee Cezard; Joris A. M. Bertrand; Boris Delahaie; Josselin Cornuault; Thomas Duval; Olivier Bouchez; Borja Milá; Christophe Thébaud

Here, we present an adaptation of restriction‐site‐associated DNA sequencing (RAD‐seq) to the Illumina HiSeq2000 technology that we used to produce SNP markers in very large quantities at low cost per unit in the Réunion grey white‐eye (Zosterops borbonicus), a nonmodel passerine bird species with no reference genome. We sequenced a set of six pools of 18–25 individuals using a single sequencing lane. This allowed us to build around 600 000 contigs, among which at least 386 000 could be mapped to the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) genome. This yielded more than 80 000 SNPs that could be mapped unambiguously and are evenly distributed across the genome. Thus, our approach provides a good illustration of the high potential of paired‐end RAD sequencing of pooled DNA samples combined with comparative assembly to the zebra finch genome to build large contigs and characterize vast numbers of informative SNPs in nonmodel passerine bird species in a very efficient and cost‐effective way.


Molecular Ecology | 2012

The role of immigration and in-situ radiation in explaining blood parasite assemblages in an island bird clade.

Josselin Cornuault; Anaïs Bataillard; Ben H. Warren; Amélie Lootvoet; Pascal Mirleau; Thomas Duval; Borja Milá; Christophe Thébaud; Philipp Heeb

Parasite communities on islands are assembled through multiple immigrations and/or in‐situ diversification. In this study, we used a phylogenetic approach to investigate the role of such processes in shaping current patterns of diversity in Leucocytozoon, a group of haemosporidian blood parasites infecting whites eyes (Zosterops) endemic to the Mascarene archipelago (south‐western Indian Ocean). We found that this parasite community arose through a combination of multiple immigrations and in‐situ diversification, highlighting the importance of both processes in explaining island diversity. Specifically, two highly diverse parasite clades appear to have been present in the Mascarenes for most of their evolutionary history and have diversified within the archipelago, while another lineage apparently immigrated more recently, probably with human‐introduced birds. Interestingly, the evolutionary histories of one clade of parasites and Indian Ocean Zosterops seem tightly associated with a significant signal for phylogenetic congruence, suggesting that host–parasite co‐divergence may have occurred in this system.


The American Naturalist | 2013

Timing and number of colonizations but not diversification rates affect diversity patterns in hemosporidian lineages on a remote oceanic archipelago.

Josselin Cornuault; Ben H. Warren; Joris A. M. Bertrand; Borja Milá; Christophe Thébaud; Philipp Heeb

Parasite diversity on remote oceanic archipelagos is determined by the number and timing of colonizations and by in situ diversification rate. In this study, we compare intra-archipelago diversity of two hemosporidian parasite genera, Plasmodium and Leucocytozoon, infecting birds of the Mascarene archipelago. Despite the generally higher vagility of Plasmodium parasites, we report a diversity of Plasmodium cytochrome b haplotypes in the archipelago much lower than that of Leucocytozoon. Using phylogenetic data, we find that this difference in diversity is consistent with differences in the timing and number of colonizations, while rates of diversification do not vary significantly between the two genera. The prominence of immigration history in explaining current diversity patterns highlights the importance of historical contingencies in driving disparate biogeographic patterns in potentially harmful blood parasites infecting island birds.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2016

The role of selection and historical factors in driving population differentiation along an elevational gradient in an island bird

Joris A. M. Bertrand; Boris Delahaie; Yann X. C. Bourgeois; Thomas Duval; Ricardo García-Jiménez; Josselin Cornuault; Benoit Pujol; Christophe Thébaud; Borja Milá

Adaptation to local environmental conditions and the range dynamics of populations can influence evolutionary divergence along environmental gradients. Thus, it is important to investigate patterns of both phenotypic and genetic variations among populations to reveal the respective roles of these two types of factors in driving population differentiation. Here, we test for evidence of phenotypic and genetic structure across populations of a passerine bird (Zosterops borbonicus) distributed along a steep elevational gradient on the island of Réunion. Using 11 microsatellite loci screened in 401 individuals from 18 localities distributed along the gradient, we found that genetic differentiation occurred at two spatial levels: (i) between two main population groups corresponding to highland and lowland areas, respectively, and (ii) within each of these two groups. In contrast, several morphological traits varied gradually along the gradient. Comparison of neutral genetic differentiation (FST) and phenotypic differentiation (PST) showed that PST largely exceeds FST at several morphological traits, which is consistent with a role for local adaptation in driving morphological divergence along the gradient. Overall, our results revealed an area of secondary contact midway up the gradient between two major, cryptic, population groups likely diverged in allopatry. Remarkably, local adaptation has shaped phenotypic differentiation irrespective of population history, resulting in different patterns of variation along the elevational gradient. Our findings underscore the importance of understanding both historical and selective factors when trying to explain variation along environmental gradients.


Journal of Heredity | 2016

Candidate Gene Analysis Suggests Untapped Genetic Complexity in Melanin-Based Pigmentation in Birds

Yann X. C. Bourgeois; Joris A. M. Bertrand; Boris Delahaie; Josselin Cornuault; Thomas Duval; Borja Milá; Christophe Thébaud

Studies on melanin-based color variation in a context of natural selection have provided a wealth of information on the link between phenotypic and genetic variation. Here, we evaluated associations between melanic plumage patterns and genetic polymorphism in the Réunion grey white-eye (Zosterops borbonicus), a species in which mutations on MC1R do not seem to play any role in explaining melanic variation. This species exhibits 5 plumage color variants that can be grouped into 3 color forms which occupy discrete geographic regions in the lowlands of Réunion, and a fourth high-elevation form which comprises 2 color morphs (grey and brown) and represents a true color polymorphism. We conducted a comprehensive survey of sequence variation in 96 individuals at a series of 7 candidate genes other than MC1R that have been previously shown to influence melanin-based color patterns in vertebrates, including genes that have rarely been studied in a wild bird species before: POMC, Agouti, TYR, TYRP1, DCT, Corin, and SLC24A5 Of these 7 genes, 2 (Corin and TYRP1) displayed an interesting shift in allele frequencies between lowland and highland forms and a departure from mutation-drift equilibrium consistent with balancing selection in the polymorphic highland form only. Sequence variation at Agouti, a gene frequently involved in melanin-based pigmentation patterning, was not associated with color forms or morphs. Thus, we suggest that functionally important changes in loci other than those classically studied are involved in the color polymorphism exhibited by the Réunion grey white-eye and possibly many other nonmodel species.


Royal Society Open Science | 2017

A novel locus on chromosome 1 underlies the evolution of a melanic plumage polymorphism in a wild songbird

Yann X. C. Bourgeois; Boris Delahaie; Mathieu Gautier; Emeline Lhuillier; Pierre-Jean G. Malé; Joris A. M. Bertrand; Josselin Cornuault; Kazumasa Wakamatsu; Olivier Bouchez; Claire Mould; Jade Bruxaux; Hélène Holota; Borja Milá; Christophe Thébaud

Understanding the mechanisms responsible for phenotypic diversification within and among species ultimately rests with linking naturally occurring mutations to functionally and ecologically significant traits. Colour polymorphisms are of great interest in this context because discrete colour patterns within a population are often controlled by just a few genes in a common environment. We investigated how and why phenotypic diversity arose and persists in the Zosterops borbonicus white-eye of Reunion (Mascarene archipelago), a colour polymorphic songbird in which all highland populations contain individuals belonging to either a brown or a grey plumage morph. Using extensive phenotypic and genomic data, we demonstrate that this melanin-based colour polymorphism is controlled by a single locus on chromosome 1 with two large-effect alleles, which was not previously described as affecting hair or feather colour. Differences between colour morphs appear to rely upon complex cis-regulatory variation that either prevents the synthesis of pheomelanin in grey feathers, or increases its production in brown ones. We used coalescent analyses to show that, from a ‘brown’ ancestral population, the dominant ‘grey’ allele spread quickly once it arose from a new mutation. Since colour morphs are always found in mixture, this implies that the selected allele does not go to fixation, but instead reaches an intermediate frequency, as would be expected under balancing selection.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2017

Narrow hybrid zones in spite of very low population differentiation in neutral markers in an island bird species complex

Boris Delahaie; Josselin Cornuault; C. Masson; Joris A. M. Bertrand; Yann X. C. Bourgeois; Borja Milá; Christophe Thébaud

Patterns of phenotypic and genic frequencies across hybrid zones provide insight into the origin and evolution of reproductive isolation. The Reunion grey white‐eye, Zosterops borbonicus, exhibits parapatrically distributed plumage colour forms across the lowlands of the small volcanic island of Reunion (Mascarene archipelago). These forms meet and hybridize in regions that are natural barriers to dispersal (rivers, lava fields). Here, we investigated the relationship among patterns of differentiation at neutral genetic (microsatellite) markers, phenotypic traits (morphology and plumage colour) and niche characteristics across three independent hybrid zones. Patterns of phenotypic divergence revealed that these hybrid zones are among the narrowest ever documented in birds. However, the levels of phenotypic divergence stand in stark contrast to the lack of clear population neutral genetic structure between forms. The position of the hybrid zones coincides with different natural physical barriers, yet is not associated with steep changes in vegetation and related climatic variables, and major habitat transitions are shifted from these locations by at least 18 km. This suggests that the hybrid zones are stabilized over natural dispersal barriers, independently of environmental boundaries, and are not associated with niche divergence. A striking feature of these hybrid zones is the very low levels of genetic differentiation in neutral markers between forms, suggesting that phenotypic divergence has a narrow genetic basis and may reflect recent divergence at a few linked genes under strong selection, with a possible role for assortative mating in keeping these forms apart.


Ecology Letters | 2015

Islands as model systems in ecology and evolution: prospects fifty years after MacArthur‐Wilson

Ben H. Warren; Daniel Simberloff; Robert E. Ricklefs; Robin Aguilée; Fabien L. Condamine; Dominique Gravel; Hélène Morlon; Nicolas Mouquet; James Rosindell; Juliane Casquet; Elena Conti; Josselin Cornuault; José María Fernández-Palacios; Tomislav Hengl; S.J. Norder; Kenneth F. Rijsdijk; Isabel Sanmartín; Dominique Strasberg; Kostas A. Triantis; Luis M. Valente; Robert J. Whittaker; Rosemary G. Gillespie; Brent C. Emerson; Christophe Thébaud


Journal of Biogeography | 2017

A roadmap for island biology: 50 fundamental questions after 50 years of The Theory of Island Biogeography

Jairo Patiño; Robert J. Whittaker; Paulo A. V. Borges; José María Fernández-Palacios; Claudine Ah-Peng; Miguel B. Araújo; Sérgio P. Ávila; Pedro Cardoso; Josselin Cornuault; Erik J. de Boer; Lea de Nascimento; Artur Gil; Aarón González-Castro; Daniel S. Gruner; Ruben Heleno; Joaquín Hortal; Juan Carlos Illera; Christopher N. Kaiser-Bunbury; Thomas J. Matthews; Anna Papadopoulou; Nathalie Pettorelli; Jonathan P. Price; Ana M. C. Santos; Manuel J. Steinbauer; Kostas A. Triantis; Luis M. Valente; Pablo Vargas; Patrick Weigelt; Brent C. Emerson

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Borja Milá

Spanish National Research Council

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Boris Delahaie

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Philipp Heeb

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Benoit Pujol

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Ben H. Warren

University of La Réunion

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Emeline Lhuillier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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