Laura Marie Berman , Meng Yue Wu , Pratibha Baveja , Emilie Cros , Yong Chee Keita Sin , Dewi M. Prawiradilaga , Frank E. Rheindt
{"title":"Population structure in Mixornis tit-babblers across Sunda Shelf matches interfluvia of paleo-rivers","authors":"Laura Marie Berman , Meng Yue Wu , Pratibha Baveja , Emilie Cros , Yong Chee Keita Sin , Dewi M. Prawiradilaga , Frank E. Rheindt","doi":"10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108105","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>Rivers constitute an important biogeographic divide in vast areas of tropical rainforest, such as the Amazon and Congo Basins. Southeast Asia’s rainforests are currently fragmented across islands divided by sea, which has long obscured their extensive history of terrestrial connectivity as part of a vast (but now submerged) subcontinent – Sundaland – during most of the Quaternary. The role of paleo-rivers in determining population structure in Sundaic rainforests at a time when these forests were connected remains little understood. We examined the coloration of museum skins and used the genomic DNA of museum samples and freshly-collected blood tissue of a pair of Sundaic songbird species, the pin-striped and bold-striped tit-babblers (<em>Mixornis gularis</em> and <em>M. bornensis</em>, respectively), to assess the genetic affinity of populations on small Sundaic islands that have largely been ignored by modern research. Our genomic and morphological results place the populations from the Anambas and Natuna Islands firmly within <em>M. gularis</em> from the Malay Peninsula in western Sundaland, even though some of these islands are geographically much closer to Borneo, where <em>M. bornensis</em> resides. Our results reveal genetic structure consistent with the course of Sundaic paleo-rivers and the location of the interfluvia they formed, and add to a small but growing body of evidence that rivers would have been of equal biogeographic importance in Sundaland’s former connected forest landscape as they are in Amazonia and the Congo Basin today.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":56109,"journal":{"name":"Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":3.6000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1055790324000976","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Rivers constitute an important biogeographic divide in vast areas of tropical rainforest, such as the Amazon and Congo Basins. Southeast Asia’s rainforests are currently fragmented across islands divided by sea, which has long obscured their extensive history of terrestrial connectivity as part of a vast (but now submerged) subcontinent – Sundaland – during most of the Quaternary. The role of paleo-rivers in determining population structure in Sundaic rainforests at a time when these forests were connected remains little understood. We examined the coloration of museum skins and used the genomic DNA of museum samples and freshly-collected blood tissue of a pair of Sundaic songbird species, the pin-striped and bold-striped tit-babblers (Mixornis gularis and M. bornensis, respectively), to assess the genetic affinity of populations on small Sundaic islands that have largely been ignored by modern research. Our genomic and morphological results place the populations from the Anambas and Natuna Islands firmly within M. gularis from the Malay Peninsula in western Sundaland, even though some of these islands are geographically much closer to Borneo, where M. bornensis resides. Our results reveal genetic structure consistent with the course of Sundaic paleo-rivers and the location of the interfluvia they formed, and add to a small but growing body of evidence that rivers would have been of equal biogeographic importance in Sundaland’s former connected forest landscape as they are in Amazonia and the Congo Basin today.
河流是亚马逊河流域和刚果河流域等广大热带雨林地区重要的生物地理分界线。东南亚的热带雨林目前分散在被海洋分割的岛屿上,这长期以来掩盖了它们在第四纪的大部分时间里作为一个广阔(但现在已被淹没)次大陆--巽他兰--的一部分而与陆地相连接的广泛历史。在巽他雨林相互连接的时期,古河口动物在决定巽他雨林种群结构方面的作用仍然鲜为人知。我们研究了博物馆皮肤的颜色,并利用博物馆样本和新鲜采集的一对巽他鸣禽物种--细条纹山雀和粗条纹山雀(分别为 Mixornis gularis 和 M. bornensis)--的血液组织的基因组 DNA 来评估巽他小岛上种群的遗传亲缘关系,这些种群在很大程度上被现代研究忽视了。我们的基因组学和形态学结果将阿南巴斯群岛和纳土纳群岛的种群牢牢地归属于来自西巽他半岛马来半岛的M.我们的研究结果与巽他古河流的流向以及它们所形成的交汇处的位置是一致的,并且为越来越多的少量证据增添了新的内容,这些证据表明,在巽他兰曾经相连的森林景观中,河流的生物地理重要性与今天在亚马孙和刚果盆地的河流的生物地理重要性是相同的。
期刊介绍:
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution is dedicated to bringing Darwin''s dream within grasp - to "have fairly true genealogical trees of each great kingdom of Nature." The journal provides a forum for molecular studies that advance our understanding of phylogeny and evolution, further the development of phylogenetically more accurate taxonomic classifications, and ultimately bring a unified classification for all the ramifying lines of life. Phylogeographic studies will be considered for publication if they offer EXCEPTIONAL theoretical or empirical advances.