“…Avian biogeography in continental Southeast Asia, an area including the mainland and continental islands, has a long history of study (Deignan, ; Hughes, Round, & Woodruff, ; Smythies, , ; Wells, ). This base of knowledge has been augmented in the last 15 years by a steady stream of molecular phylogenetic reconstructions that have identified a complex pattern of colonization into, out of, and within the region (e.g., Moyle, Andersen, Oliveros, Steinheimer, & Reddy, ; Oliveros, Field, et al, ; Wang, Kimball, Braun, Liang, & Zhang, ), and which have substantially improved Southeast Asian bird classification (Cai et al, ; Cibois et al, ; Cibois, Kalyakin, Han, & Pasquet, ; Fuchs, Pasquet, Couloux, Fjeldså, & Bowie, ; Lim et al, ; Moyle et al, ; Sangster, Alström, Forsmark, & Olsson, ; Shakya & Sheldon, ; Zhang et al, ). However, phylogenetic studies are imprecise when it comes to identifying the drivers of diversification and extinction, such as changes in gene flow and population sizes, because they span large temporal and spatial scales.…”