Evolutionary history and patterns of divergence in three tropical east Asian squirrels across the Isthmus of Kra

Author:

Hinckley Arlo123,Hawkins Melissa T. R.2,Maldonado Jesús E.4,Leonard Jennifer A.1

Affiliation:

1. Conservation & Evolutionary Genetics Group Estación Biológica de Doñana (EBD‐CSIC) Seville Spain

2. Division of Mammals, Department of Vertebrate Zoology National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution District of Columbia Washington USA

3. Departamento de Zoología Universidad de Sevilla Seville Spain

4. Smithsonian National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute Center for Conservation Genomics District of Columbia Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractAimUnderstanding the biotic and abiotic mechanisms underlying the generation and maintenance of biogeographic transitions represent long‐standing topics in evolutionary biology. The Isthmus of Kra (IOK) divides Sundaland and Indochina and constitutes a poorly characterized terrestrial biogeographic transition. Here we looked at population genetic structure of three species that are distributed across the IOK to gain insights into the drivers that have shaped this transition and regional diversification patterns.LocationTropical east Asia: Sundaland and Indochina.TaxaCallosciurus caniceps, Tamiops mcclellandii, and Dremomys rufigenis‐ornatus species complex (Mammalia: Rodentia: Sciuridae).MethodsWe generated complete mitogenomes and sequences of 11 nuclear intron fragments from 61 and 67 museum specimen samples, respectively. We assessed population structure by constructing Maximum Likelihood mitogenome phylogenies (IQTREE2), and nuclear marker haplowebs and conspecificity matrices (HaplowebMaker and CoMa). We estimated divergence dates through Bayesian phylogenetic inference (BEAST2) and put these results in the context of climatic and geological history.ResultsHigh levels of mitochondrial and nuclear divergence were identified across the IOK in all three squirrels. Lineage turnover was consistent with the two major mammal species distribution transitions near the Kangar‐Pattani Line and at the juncture between the Thai‐Malay peninsula and the mainland. Divergence of mitochondrial lineages across Kra was estimated in the late Pliocene/ early Pleistocene for all three taxa. Older Miocene/Pliocene divergences were estimated within Indochina in D. rufigenis‐ornatus and T. mcclellandii, which were paraphyletic.Main ConclusionsSundaic and Indochinese populations have possibly diverged in allopatric habitat refugia in or around mountains during periods of increased aridity and evergreen forest contraction. Ecological differences and/or topography might have influenced genetic differentiation during periods of rainforest expansion. Alternative hypotheses remain to be tested with more informative nuclear markers and additional geographic sampling.

Funder

American Museum of Natural History

European Commission

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación

Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad

Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University

Smithsonian Institution

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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