2016
DOI: 10.1111/mec.13820
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Local endemism and within‐island diversification of shrews illustrate the importance of speciation in building Sundaland mammal diversity

Abstract: Island systems are important models for evolutionary biology because they provide convenient, discrete biogeographic units of study. Continental islands with a history of intermittent dry land connections confound the discrete definitions of islands and have led zoologists to predict (1) little differentiation of terrestrial organisms among continental shelf islands and (2) extinction, rather than speciation, to be the main cause of differences in community composition among islands. However, few continental i… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(28 citation statements)
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References 86 publications
(122 reference statements)
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“…The two previous studies that included R. catamitus samples lacked sampling from the northern half of Sumatra; thus, little is known regarding the range‐wide genetic structure of this species. We hypothesise that R. catamitus is composed of several lineages across Sumatra, and may harbour more than one species, as has been observed in other Sumatran fauna (Demos, Giarla, Handika, & Rowe, ). The existence of a cryptic species on the island of Sumatra would add to growing evidence that within‐island diversification has contributed substantially to biodiversity on Sumatra (Demos et al., ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 69%
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“…The two previous studies that included R. catamitus samples lacked sampling from the northern half of Sumatra; thus, little is known regarding the range‐wide genetic structure of this species. We hypothesise that R. catamitus is composed of several lineages across Sumatra, and may harbour more than one species, as has been observed in other Sumatran fauna (Demos, Giarla, Handika, & Rowe, ). The existence of a cryptic species on the island of Sumatra would add to growing evidence that within‐island diversification has contributed substantially to biodiversity on Sumatra (Demos et al., ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 69%
“…We hypothesise that R. catamitus is composed of several lineages across Sumatra, and may harbour more than one species, as has been observed in other Sumatran fauna (Demos, Giarla, Handika, & Rowe, ). The existence of a cryptic species on the island of Sumatra would add to growing evidence that within‐island diversification has contributed substantially to biodiversity on Sumatra (Demos et al., ). In this study, we use mitochondrial DNA, genome‐wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), and morphological data to investigate the following questions: (i) how many lineages compose R. catamitus ?…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 69%
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“…Previous genetic studies on island populations have mainly focused on genetic diversity and the phylogenetic relationships among islands (Hinten et al 2003, Salgueiro et al 2004, Kamada et al 2012, Kawai et al 2013. Recently, there have been several studies about the intra-island genetic structure of mammals, many of which have been conducted on large islands such as Tasmania, Australia (Jones et al 2004, Miller et al 2011; Java and Sumatra, Indonesia (Demos et al 2016); the South Island of New Zealand (O' Donnell et al 2016); Madagascar (Jansa et al 2008, Rakotoarisoa et al 2013; and Hokkaido, Japan (Kawai et al 2013). Studies focusing on the intra-island genetic structures of small islands (<500 km 2 ) have been rare.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%