4.4 Article

Inter-glacial isolation caused divergence of cold-adapted species: the case of the snow partridge

Journal

CURRENT ZOOLOGY
Volume 68, Issue 4, Pages 489-498

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/cz/zoab075

Keywords

climate fluctuations; divergence; Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau; Quaternary; snow partridge

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Funding

  1. second National Survey on Terrestrial Wildlife Resources in China

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This study investigates the divergence process of the cold-adapted species L. lerwa and finds that climatic oscillations played a significant role in their isolation and subsequent divergence on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau.
Deciphering the role of climatic oscillations in species divergence helps us understand the mechanisms that shape global biodiversity. The cold-adapted species may have expanded their distribution with the development of glaciers during glacial period. With the retreat of glaciers, these species were discontinuously distributed in the high-altitude mountains and isolated by geographical barriers. However, the study that focuses on the speciation process of cold-adapted species is scant. To fill this gap, we combined population genetic data and ecological niche models (ENMs) to explore divergence process of snow partridge (Lerwa lerwa). Lerwa lerwa is a cold-adapted bird that is distributed from 4,000 to 5,500 m. We found 2 genetic populations within L. lerwa, and they diverged from each other at about 0.40-0.44 million years ago (inter-glacial period after Zhongliangan glaciation). The ENMs suggested that L. lerwa expanded to the low elevations of the Himalayas and Hengduan mountains during glacial period, whereas it contracted to the high elevations, southern of Himalayas, and Hengduan mountains during inter-glacial periods. Effective population size trajectory also suggested that L. lerwa expanded its population size during the glacial period. Consistent with our expectation, the results support that inter-glacial isolation contributed to the divergence of cold-adapted L. lerwa on Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. This study deepens our understanding of how climatic oscillations have driven divergence process of cold-adapted Phasianidae species distributed on mountains.

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