Birds are the best-known animal class, with only about five or six new
species descriptions per year since 1999. Integrating genomic and phenotypic
research with arduous fieldwork in remote regions, we describe five new songbird
species and five new subspecies from a small area near Sulawesi, Indonesia, all
collected in a single 6-week expedition. Two factors contributed to the
description of this large number of species from such a small geographic area: (i)
Knowledge of Quaternary Period land connections helped pinpoint isolated islands
likely to harbor substantial endemism and (ii) studying accounts of historic
collectors such as Alfred Wallace facilitated the identification of undercollected
islands. Our findings suggest that humans’ understanding of biogeographically
complex regions such as Wallacea remains incomplete.
Quaternary climate oscillations are a well-known driver of animal diversification, but their effects are most well studied in areas where glaciations lead to habitat fragmentation. In large areas of the planet, however, glaciations have had the opposite effect, but here their impacts are much less well understood. This is especially true in Southeast Asia, where cyclical changes in land distribution have generated enormous land expansions during glacial periods. In this study, we selected a panel of five songbird species complexes covering a range of ecological specificities to investigate the effects Quaternary land bridges have had on the connectivity of Southeast Asian forest biota. Specifically, we combined morphological and bioacoustic analysis with an arsenal of population genomic and modelling approaches applied to thousands of genomewide DNA markers across a total of more than 100 individuals. Our analyses show that species dependent on forest understorey exhibit deep differentiation between Borneo and western Sundaland, with no evidence of gene flow during the land bridges accompanying the last 1-2 ice ages. In contrast, dispersive canopy species and habitat generalists have experienced more recent gene flow. Our results argue that there remains much cryptic species-level diversity to be discovered in Southeast Asia even in well-known animal groups such as birds, especially in nondispersive forest understorey inhabitants. We also demonstrate that Quaternary land bridges have not been equally suitable conduits of gene flow for all species complexes and that life history is a major factor in predicting relative population divergence time across Quaternary climate fluctuations.
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