With seven independent origins among birds, obligate brood parasitism offers a powerful framework for comparative genomic analysis and the opportunity to examine the genomic consequences of a major life history transition, the loss of parental care.
More...With seven independent origins among birds, obligate brood parasitism offers a powerful framework for comparative genomic analysis and the opportunity to examine the genomic consequences of a major life history transition, the loss of parental care. This project contributes to a broader effort to compare genome evolution in all seven brood parasitic clades among birds, and to test the prediction that the evolution of brood parasitism (and loss of parental care behavior) results in genome-wide signatures of molecular convergence and/or convergent changes in coding and/or regulatory regions associated with particular genetic pathways or functions. The focal species for this project is the brood parasitic black-headed duck (Heteronetta atricapilla), which is compared to representatives of three closely related genera: African pygmy goose (Nettapus auratus), ruddy duck (Oxyura jamaicensis), and freckled duck (Stictonetta naevosa).
Less...Accession | PRJNA588796 |
Data Type | Genome sequencing and assembly |
Scope | Multispecies |
Grants | - "COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH: Comparative Genomics of Host-specific Adaptation and Life History Evolution in Brood Parasitic Birds" (Grant ID DBI 1754311, 1754397, 1754406, 1754643, 1940624, National Science Foundation)
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Submission | Registration date: 11-Nov-2019 Brood Parasitic Bird Genomes Consortium- University of Missouri
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Relevance | Evolution |
Project Data:
Resource Name | Number of Links |
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Sequence data |
Nucleotide (total) | 8538 |
WGS master | 4 |
SRA Experiments | 4 |
Other datasets |
BioSample | 8 |
Assembly | 4 |
Related Project Category: RefseqGenbank
PRJNA641662 : Oxyura jamaicensis RefSeq Genome sequencing and assembly