Community Genetics Reveal Elevated Levels of Sympatric Gene Flow among Morphologically Similar but Not among Morphologically Dissimilar Species of Lake Victoria Cichlid Fish

Joint Authors

Mrosso, H. D. J.
Konijnendijk, N.
Seehausen, Ole
Joyce, D. A.
Egas, M.

Source

International Journal of Evolutionary Biology

Issue

Vol. 2011, Issue 2011 (31 Dec. 2011), pp.1-12, 12 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2011-11-24

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

12

Main Subjects

Biology

Abstract EN

We examined genetic structure among five species of Lake Victoria haplochromine cichlids in four island communities, using a full factorial sampling design that compared genetic differentiation between pairs of species and populations of varying morphological similarity and geographical proximity.

We found that allopatric conspecific populations were on average significantly more strongly differentiated than sympatric heterospecific populations of morphologically similar species.

Allopatric heterospecific populations of morphologically dissimilar species were most differentiated.

Our work demonstrates that phenotypic divergence can be maintained and perhaps even evolve in sympatry despite considerable gene flow between species.

Conversely, phenotypic resemblance among conspecific populations can be maintained despite geographical isolation.

Additionally we show that anthropogenically increased hybridization does not affect all sympatric species evenly but predominantly affects morphologically similar and closely related species.

This has important implications for the evolution of reproductive isolation between species These findings are also consistent with the hypothesis of speciation reversal due to weakening of divergent selection and reproductive isolation as a consequence of habitat homogenization and offers an evolutionary mechanistic explanation for the observation that species poor assemblages in turbid areas of the lake are characterized by just one or two species in each of a few morphologically distinct genera.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Konijnendijk, N.& Joyce, D. A.& Mrosso, H. D. J.& Egas, M.& Seehausen, Ole. 2011. Community Genetics Reveal Elevated Levels of Sympatric Gene Flow among Morphologically Similar but Not among Morphologically Dissimilar Species of Lake Victoria Cichlid Fish. International Journal of Evolutionary Biology،Vol. 2011, no. 2011, pp.1-12.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-485400

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Konijnendijk, N.…[et al.]. Community Genetics Reveal Elevated Levels of Sympatric Gene Flow among Morphologically Similar but Not among Morphologically Dissimilar Species of Lake Victoria Cichlid Fish. International Journal of Evolutionary Biology No. 2011 (2011), pp.1-12.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-485400

American Medical Association (AMA)

Konijnendijk, N.& Joyce, D. A.& Mrosso, H. D. J.& Egas, M.& Seehausen, Ole. Community Genetics Reveal Elevated Levels of Sympatric Gene Flow among Morphologically Similar but Not among Morphologically Dissimilar Species of Lake Victoria Cichlid Fish. International Journal of Evolutionary Biology. 2011. Vol. 2011, no. 2011, pp.1-12.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-485400

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-485400