The Nanling Mountains of southcentral China played a variable role as a
barrier and refuge for birds depending upon landscape structure and
timing of events
Abstract
The Nanling Mountains are an important mountain range and watershed in
southcentral China. Because of the abundance in relictual plant species
and geological stability throughout the Cenozoic, the mountains are
considered a “museum” of subtropical biological diversity. With
respect to birds, however, the roles of the Nanling Mountains in
impeding the dispersal of the subtropical birds and, as a result,
shaping their population and community structures have received little
consideration. To examine these roles, we compiled and analyzed two
datasets. (1) To test the mountains’ influence on gene flow, we
undertook a population phylogeographic study comparing mitochondrial COI
and Cytb DNA sequences of 5 sylvioid resident bird species of the
mountains (Huet’s Fulvetta Alcippe hueti, Red-billed Leiothrix Leiothrix
lutea, Greater Necklaced Laughingthrush Pterorhinus pectoralis,
Indochinese Yuhina Staphida torqueola, and Mountain Bulbul Ixos
mcclellandii). (2) To examine differentiated community development over
the history of modern birds, we examined distributional data of all
species of the Nanling region using public species occurrence records.
For part (1), we sampled 327 individuals from 36 sites and conducted
correlation analysis of genetic and geographic distances, taking into
account the landscape of the mountains. We found that the mountains do
not seriously impede gene flow among populations but influenced species
differently. For part (2), comparative analysis of 446 species in 81
families indicated that family membership influenced the community
composition of birds in Nanling region. Variation in family
distributions is attributable to both environmental and evolutionary
factors. Overall, we found that the Nanling Mountains are not currently
a substantial barrier to gene flow among the species we studied but act
as a corridor and refuge for these birds. However, analyses on higher
ranked community data suggest the mountains acted as a barrier in older
times, corresponding to the known diversification events in southeast
Asian avifauna.