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      Phylogeny, Biodiversity, and Species Limits of Passerine Birds in the Sino-Himalayan Region—A Critical Review

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      Ornithological Monographs
      University of California Press

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          Visualization of an Oxygen-deficient Bottom Water Circulation in Osaka Bay, Japan

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            Build-up of the Himalayan avifauna through immigration: a biogeographical analysis of the Phylloscopus and Seicercus warblers.

            The Himalayan mountain range is one of the most species-rich areas in the world, harboring about 8% of the world's bird species. In this study, we compare the relative importance of immigration versus in situ speciation to the build-up of the Himalayan avifauna, by evaluating the biogeographic history of the Phylloscopus/Seicercus warblers, a speciose clade that is well represented in Himalayan forests. We use a comprehensive, multigene phylogeny in conjunction with dispersal-vicariance analysis to discern patterns of speciation and dispersal within this clade. The results indicate that virtually no speciation has occurred within the Himalayas. Instead, several speciation events are attributed to dispersal into the Himalayas followed by vicariance between the Himalayas and China/Southeast Asia. Most, perhaps all, of these events appear to be pre-Pleistocene. The apparent lack of speciation within the Himalayas stands in contrast to the mountain-driven Pleistocene speciation suggested for the Andes and the East African mountains.
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              Discordant mitochondrial and nuclear gene phylogenies in emydid turtles: implications for speciation and conservation

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ornithological Monographs
                Ornithological Monographs
                University of California Press
                00786594
                19412282
                February 15 2011
                February 15 2011
                : 70
                : 1
                : 64-94
                Article
                10.1525/om.2011.70.1.64
                1d28a463-7185-4b90-a8d8-0a3b0a74edde
                © 2011
                History

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