渗入
生物扩散
生物
生态学
基因流
谱系(遗传)
系统地理学
人口历史
系统发育树
溯祖理论
分类单元
进化生物学
遗传变异
人口
基因
社会学
人口学
生物化学
作者
Y Z Li,Zhongzheng Chen,Quan Li,Tao Zhang,Feng Cheng,Wen‐Yu Song,Xueyou Li,Shui-Wang He,Hongjiao Wang,Kenneth Otieno Onditi,Xuelong Jiang
标识
DOI:10.1093/sysbio/syaf052
摘要
Abstract The Mountains of Southwest China, a global biodiversity hotspot, have a unique “sky island” landscape with high diversity of both ancient and recent-formed species. While their distribution patterns offer significant insights into diversification processes, the complex geological and climatic history, combined with dynamic histories of gene flow in endemic taxa, make unravelling this history challenging. This study focuses on Asian shrew moles (genus Uropsilus), an ancient group endemic to this region with an unresolved taxonomic system. By combining phylogenomic, introgression and demographic history analyses, we investigated the historical patterns of species diversification in this genus. We detected phylogenetic discordances among rapidly diverged lineages, driven by incomplete lineage sorting, both recent and ancient gene flow, and ghost introgression. The gene flow patterns revealed strong genetic isolation in the Hengduan Mountains region, contrasted by more extensive dispersal or connectivity in areas to its east, while suggesting potential ring-like diversification around the Sichuan Basin. Demographic history indicated that rapidly diverged lineages south of the Yangtze River exhibited significantly different responses to climatic fluctuations compared to other lineages, with the East Asian monsoon likely driving their radiative differentiation and dispersal. Our study demonstrates the impacts of mountain uplift, climatic changes, and the connectivity of sky island refugia in shaping the diverse patterns of species differentiation and their distribution. [phylogenomics; introgression; Asian shrew moles; demographic history]
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