“…Due to their limited dispersal ability and sensitivity to climatic fluctuations (being heterothermic), snakes are an ideal model to examine the influence of climate oscillations and geological events on population structure, genetic diversity, and evolutionary history (Guiher and Burbrink, 2008;Ursenbacher et al, 2008;Pyron and Burbrink, 2009;Fijarczyk et al, 2011;Zhu et al, 2016). An increasing, but still limited, number of studies on snakes inhabiting this (or neighbouring) region have attempted to track species evolutionary history (Huang et al, 2007;Ding et al, 2011;Lin et al, 2014;Guo et al, 2011Guo et al, , 2016Zhu et al, 2016), and include Deinagkistrodon acutus, Gloydius brevicaudus, Protobothrops jerdonii, Naja atra, Viridovipera stejnegeri, and Trimeresurus albolabris (Huang et al, 2007;Ding et al, 2011;Lin et al, 2014;Guo et al, 2011Guo et al, , 2016Zhu et al, 2016). All studies have indicated that these snakes experienced population expansion in some or all mtDNA lineages defined, and the five pitvipers consistently showed an east-west division, or longitudinal divergence, while latitudinal divergence was also detected in T. albolabris and V. stejnegeri.…”