Researchers are pinpointing the genes that lie behind the varied beaks of Darwin’s finches — the iconic birds whose facial variations have become a classic example of Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection. Last year, researchers identified a gene that helps to determine the shape of the birds’ beaks. In Science, they reported a different gene that controls beak size. Shifts in this gene underlay an evolutionary change that researchers watched from 2004 to 2005, during a drought that ravaged the Galapagos Islands, where the finches live.





The beak sizes of one population of finches shrank, so as to avoid competing for food sources with a different kind of finch — and their genetics changed accordingly. “A big question was, ‘Is it possible to identify genes underlying such evolution in action, even in a natural population?’” says Leif Andersson, a geneticist at Uppsala University in Sweden and one of the study’s authors.



The story begins about 2 million years ago, when the common ancestor of all Darwin’s finches arrived on the Galapagos Islands. By the time of Charles Darwin’s visit in 1835, the birds had diversified into more than a dozen species, each adapted to different ecological niches. Some had massive beaks for cracking seeds, some had delicate beaks for snatching insects and some even had sharp beaks for feeding on blood.



To examine the genetic basis for this variation, the researchers compared the genomes of 60 birds representing 6 species of Darwin’s finches, along with 120 specimens from other species to help them tease out phylogenetic relationships. As expected, closely related species had the most similar genomes. But in those 6 finch species, 1 region of the genome correlated more with bird size than with relatedness. Small species had one variation of this genomic region, large species had another and medium-sized species had a mixture of the 2, suggesting that at least one of the genes in this region affected size.



The most likely candidate was HMGA2, which is known to affect size and face structure in other animals. Further analysis showed that in Darwin’s finches, the HMGA2 region is especially important in controlling the size of the beak.



After drought struck the Galapagos in 2003, many of the medium ground finches (Geospiza fortis) with larger-than-average beaks starved to death. They couldn’t compete with a bigger species (Geospiza magnirostris) that had recently colonised the island and was better at eating large seeds. After the drought, the medium ground finches that managed to survive had smaller beaks than those that had perished, probably because they were better suited to eating the small seeds that their competitors avoided.



By analysing DNA from medium ground finches that lived around the time of the drought, the researchers found that the large-beak HMGA2 variant was more common in birds that starved to death, while the small-beak variant was more common in birds that survived.



The discovery opens up new questions for biologists to explore, such as when gene variants arise and how they contribute to splits between species, says Dolph Schluter, an evolutionary biologist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. “On the one hand it doesn’t change anything, in that we already knew there was an evolutionary response to competition during that drought,” says Dolph. “But on the other hand, it changes everything, because we can point to a physical, material basis for that change.”



