“…This hypothesis is further suggested by the fact that the natural landscapes of the Zhoushan Archipelago have been greatly modified by human activities over the last 20 years, whereby the impervious surface area continues to increase at an average rate of 1.97 km 2 per year . Although certain agricultural developments also may have positive effects for some organisms, for example, frogs, for which irrigated fields provide suitable habitats (Knutson et al, 2004;Wang et al, 2014), much of the natural vegetation cover (that is, subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forest) has now been destroyed . Evidently, more finescale studies, using precise deforestation records, highly resolving molecular (for example, genomics) approaches, and a dense sampling, are required to determine whether such recent forest fragmentation has already affected the genetic architecture of constituent species, such as L. chinense.…”