Abstract

During the last 15–20 years, phylogenetic, phylogeographic, paleontological, geological, and habitat modeling studies have improved our knowledge of Sundaic biogeography dramatically. In light of these advances, we review (or postulate) where Sundaic rainforest birds came from, the causes of their endemism, and the influence of Pleistocene climatic perturbations on their diversification. We suggest that four scenarios make up a coherent, plausible explanation of patterns of extant diversity. First, relictual lineages, which represent hangovers from the warm, wet Eocene, survived the hard climatic times of the colder, drier Oligocene and Pliocene in the mountains and adjacent lowlands of eastern Borneo, where rainforest has existed continuously for the last 20–30 million years. Second, most modern SE Asian genera developed during the Miocene. Third, the rainforest of Sundaland and its avifauna were largely isolated from the rest of SE Asia during the late Miocene and Pliocene by seasonal habitats in southern Indochina and ocean boundaries elsewhere, increasing regional endemism. Finally, the advent of global glaciation in the Pleistocene introduced a different diversification dynamic to Sundaland. Early glacial events caused sufficient drying in central Sundaland to fragment rainforest and its avifauna into refugia in eastern and western Sundaland and to allow dry-habitat taxa to reach Java from Indochina. More recent glacial events resulted in sufficient perhumid habitat in central Sundaland to reconnect previously vicariated rainforest populations, creating the lowland and elevational parapatry we see today. This Pleistocene dynamic was probably not simply one period of separation and one period of connection, but rather a complex interplay of isolation and colonization, influenced by highly variable population sizes, changing levels of gene flow, and behavioral idiosyncrasies of the species involved. Throughout all of these events, Borneo played a seminal role in rainforest bird evolution by providing the habitat necessary for diversification and the long-term survival of taxa.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call