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Recent range-wide demographic expansion in a Taiwan endemic montane bird, Steere's Liocichla (Liocichla steerii). | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the impact of Taiwan's mountainous geography on the genetic patterns of the endemic bird species, Steere's Liocichla, using mitochondrial DNA and nuclear microsatellites.
  • While mountains influence gene flow, they are not significant barriers for this bird, indicating it has expanded from multiple areas rather than being confined to isolated regions.
  • The research highlights that demographic changes over time, rather than small, isolated populations, may explain the observed genetic patterns, and emphasizes caution in interpreting results from genetic markers for conservation efforts.

Article Abstract

Background: The subtropical island of Taiwan is an area of high endemism and a complex topographic environment. Phylogeographic studies indicate that vicariance caused by Taiwan's mountains has subdivided many taxa into genetic phylogroups. We used mitochondrial DNA sequences and nuclear microsatellites to test whether the evolutionary history of an endemic montane bird, Steere's Liocichla (Liocichla steerii), fit the general vicariant paradigm for a montane organism.

Results: We found that while mountains appear to channel gene flow they are not a significant barrier for Steere's Liocichla. Recent demographic expansion was evident, and genetic diversity was relatively high across the island, suggesting expansion from multiple areas rather than a few isolated refugia. Ecological niche modeling corroborated the molecular results and suggested that populations of Steere's Liocichla are connected by climatically suitable habitat and that there was less suitable habitat during the Last Glacial Maximum.

Conclusions: Genetic and ecological niche modeling data corroborate a single history--Steere's Liocichla was at lower density during the Last Glacial Maximum and has subsequently expanded in population density. We suggest that such a range-wide density expansion might be an overlooked cause for the genetic patterns of demographic expansion that are regularly reported. We find significant differences among some populations in FST indices and an admixture analysis. Though both of these results are often used to suggest conservation action, we affirm that statistically significant results are not necessarily biologically meaningful and we urge caution when interpreting highly polymorphic data such as microsatellites.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2848157PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-10-71DOI Listing

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