Data from: Study "Geolocations of migratory common stonechat complex in Central Asia Flyway"
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Zhao T, Heim W, Anisimov Y, Lei F, Song G, Batbayar N, Davaasuren B, Hellström M, Liedvogel M, Bensch S, Helm B. 2026. Data from: Study "Geolocations of migratory common stonechat complex in Central Asia Flyway". Movebank Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.5441/001/1.705Abstract
Long-distance avian migration is thought to be under strong natural selection. Facing geographical barriers, migrants display various patterns considered to be adaptive. For example, they may detour along either side around the barrier or cross it, requiring specialized behavioral adaptations. Variations within closely related taxa are excellent sources for understanding the evolutionary background of migration and how barriers are shaping migration routes. In Asia, some species are assumed to have a migratory divide in response to the major geographical barrier, the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP), including the stonechat taxa (Siberian Stonechat Saxicola maurus maurus and Amur Stonechat S. stejnegeri). As they detour along either side of the QTP, these taxa are believed to disfavor a crossing over the highland. However, the more southernly distributed Tibetan Stonechat (S. m. przewalskii) breeds on the QTP, suggesting adaptation to high elevation. To investigate migration patterns and the potentially associated genetic differences, we studied migration routes and population genetics of four populations around the assumed migratory divide in Russia and Mongolia, and of one from the QTP in China. Our results confirmed the existence of a migratory divide between maurus and stejnegeri, albeit with extensive hybridization. We observed both the hypothesized western and eastern routes, but also found individuals employing intermediate routes crossing the QTP, of which two-thirds were clear hybrids. Meanwhile, przewalskii followed a highland-crossing route and was genetically differentiated from maurus and stejnegeri. The diverse migration routes among Asian stonechats show differential responses towards the geographical barrier. The intermediate route may be associated with hybridization, and its conditional viability may facilitate gene flow between maurus and stejnegeri. The Asian stonechat complex thus offers great opportunities for novel research of the genetics and evolution of migration. The specific evolutionary background associated with inhabiting and crossing the QTP can offer new perspectives in this field.
Keywords
Saxicola maurus, Amur stonechat, animal movement, animal tracking, avian migration, Central Asian Flyway, light-level logger, movement barriers, passerines, Saxicola maurus maurus, Saxicola maurus przewalskii, Saxicola stejnegeri, Siberian stonechat, solar geolocation, stonechats, Tibentan stonechat
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@misc{001/1_705,
title = {Data from: Study "Geolocations of migratory common stonechat complex in Central Asia Flyway"},
author = {Zhao, T and Heim, W and Anisimov, Y and Lei, F and Song, G and Batbayar, N and Davaasuren, B and Hellström, M and Liedvogel, M and Bensch, S and Helm, B},
year = {2026},
URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.705},
doi = {doi:10.5441/001/1.705},
publisher = {Movebank data repository}
}RIS
TY - DATA ID - doi:10.5441/001/1.705 T1 - Data from: Study "Geolocations of migratory common stonechat complex in Central Asia Flyway" AU - Zhao, Tianhao AU - Heim, Wieland AU - Anisimov, Yury AU - Lei, Fumin AU - Song, Gang AU - Batbayar, Nyambayar AU - Davaasuren, Batmunkh AU - Hellström, Magnus AU - Liedvogel, Miriam AU - Bensch, Staffan AU - Helm, Barbara Y1 - 2026/04/14 KW - Saxicola maurus KW - Amur stonechat KW - animal movement KW - animal tracking KW - avian migration KW - Central Asian Flyway KW - light-level logger KW - movement barriers KW - passerines KW - Saxicola maurus maurus KW - Saxicola maurus przewalskii KW - Saxicola stejnegeri KW - Siberian stonechat KW - solar geolocation KW - stonechats KW - Tibentan stonechat KW - Saxicola maurus PB - Movebank data repository UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.705 DO - doi:10.5441/001/1.705 ER -

