Shennongjia–Wushan Mountains—One cryptic glacial refugium introduced by the phylogeographical study of the Geometridae moth Ourapteryx szechuana Wehrli

Abstract The origin and evolution of biodiversity in the Shennongjia and Wushan Mountains, located in central China, are little known. In this study, we used Ourapteryx szechuana, which is widely distributed in China and northern Nepal, to explore whether these mountains acted as glacial refugia dur...

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Main Authors: Rui Cheng, Hongxiang Han, Dayong Xue, Chaodong Zhu, Nan Jiang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-08-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7794
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spelling doaj-bc49f3afe5674069bdfabfd687e9447c2021-08-02T18:48:03ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-08-011115100661007610.1002/ece3.7794Shennongjia–Wushan Mountains—One cryptic glacial refugium introduced by the phylogeographical study of the Geometridae moth Ourapteryx szechuana WehrliRui Cheng0Hongxiang Han1Dayong Xue2Chaodong Zhu3Nan Jiang4Key Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution Institute of Zoology Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing ChinaKey Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution Institute of Zoology Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing ChinaKey Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution Institute of Zoology Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing ChinaKey Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution Institute of Zoology Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing ChinaKey Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution Institute of Zoology Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing ChinaAbstract The origin and evolution of biodiversity in the Shennongjia and Wushan Mountains, located in central China, are little known. In this study, we used Ourapteryx szechuana, which is widely distributed in China and northern Nepal, to explore whether these mountains acted as glacial refugia during climate oscillations of the Quaternary. In total, 192 samples of O. szechuana were collected throughout much of the distribution range. Phylogenetic analysis, molecular dating, demographic history reconstructions, and MAXENT were used to investigate the evolutionary history and differentiation mechanisms and predict the potential species distributions during four different periods. The phylogenetic tree and the star‐like median‐joining network strongly supported two reciprocally monophyletic and allopatric lineages. Lineage I was restricted to the Shennongjia and Wushan Mountains. The divergence time of O. szechuana from its sister species O. thibetaria was approximately 1.94 Ma. The differentiation processes of the two intraspecific lineages occurred at approximately 0.47 Ma. The demographic history reconstruction and the ecological niche model suggested that Lineage II experienced an expansion after the LGM (Last Glacial Maximum), whereas Lineage I did not experience any expansion. Our results suggested the Naynayxungla glaciation promoted the divergence of the two lineages by restricting them to different refugia. The valleys of the Shennongjia–Wushan Mountains may have kept stable and warm (thus ice‐free) environments during Quaternary glaciations, allowing this region to act as a glacial refugia. Our studies show that the Shennongjia and Wushan Mountains are likely to be important but little studied glacial refugia for the insect and thus worthy of more attention.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7794
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rui Cheng
Hongxiang Han
Dayong Xue
Chaodong Zhu
Nan Jiang
spellingShingle Rui Cheng
Hongxiang Han
Dayong Xue
Chaodong Zhu
Nan Jiang
Shennongjia–Wushan Mountains—One cryptic glacial refugium introduced by the phylogeographical study of the Geometridae moth Ourapteryx szechuana Wehrli
Ecology and Evolution
author_facet Rui Cheng
Hongxiang Han
Dayong Xue
Chaodong Zhu
Nan Jiang
author_sort Rui Cheng
title Shennongjia–Wushan Mountains—One cryptic glacial refugium introduced by the phylogeographical study of the Geometridae moth Ourapteryx szechuana Wehrli
title_short Shennongjia–Wushan Mountains—One cryptic glacial refugium introduced by the phylogeographical study of the Geometridae moth Ourapteryx szechuana Wehrli
title_full Shennongjia–Wushan Mountains—One cryptic glacial refugium introduced by the phylogeographical study of the Geometridae moth Ourapteryx szechuana Wehrli
title_fullStr Shennongjia–Wushan Mountains—One cryptic glacial refugium introduced by the phylogeographical study of the Geometridae moth Ourapteryx szechuana Wehrli
title_full_unstemmed Shennongjia–Wushan Mountains—One cryptic glacial refugium introduced by the phylogeographical study of the Geometridae moth Ourapteryx szechuana Wehrli
title_sort shennongjia–wushan mountains—one cryptic glacial refugium introduced by the phylogeographical study of the geometridae moth ourapteryx szechuana wehrli
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract The origin and evolution of biodiversity in the Shennongjia and Wushan Mountains, located in central China, are little known. In this study, we used Ourapteryx szechuana, which is widely distributed in China and northern Nepal, to explore whether these mountains acted as glacial refugia during climate oscillations of the Quaternary. In total, 192 samples of O. szechuana were collected throughout much of the distribution range. Phylogenetic analysis, molecular dating, demographic history reconstructions, and MAXENT were used to investigate the evolutionary history and differentiation mechanisms and predict the potential species distributions during four different periods. The phylogenetic tree and the star‐like median‐joining network strongly supported two reciprocally monophyletic and allopatric lineages. Lineage I was restricted to the Shennongjia and Wushan Mountains. The divergence time of O. szechuana from its sister species O. thibetaria was approximately 1.94 Ma. The differentiation processes of the two intraspecific lineages occurred at approximately 0.47 Ma. The demographic history reconstruction and the ecological niche model suggested that Lineage II experienced an expansion after the LGM (Last Glacial Maximum), whereas Lineage I did not experience any expansion. Our results suggested the Naynayxungla glaciation promoted the divergence of the two lineages by restricting them to different refugia. The valleys of the Shennongjia–Wushan Mountains may have kept stable and warm (thus ice‐free) environments during Quaternary glaciations, allowing this region to act as a glacial refugia. Our studies show that the Shennongjia and Wushan Mountains are likely to be important but little studied glacial refugia for the insect and thus worthy of more attention.
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7794
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