Gene flow between species of Lake Victoria haplochromine fishes

College

College of Science

Department/Unit

Biology

Document Type

Article

Source Title

Molecular Biology and Evolution

Volume

24

Issue

9

First Page

2069

Last Page

2080

Publication Date

9-1-2007

Abstract

The haplochromine cichlid fishes of Lake Victoria (LV), East Africa, are a textbook example of adaptive radiation - a rapid divergence of multiple morphologically distinguishable forms from a few founding lineages. The forms are generally believed to constitute a "flock" of several hundred reproductively isolated species in a dozen or so genera. This belief has, until now, not been subjected to a test, however. Here, we compare genetic variation at 11 loci in 10 haplochromine populations of 6 different species. Although the genetic diversity in the populations is quite high, using a variety of statistical tests, we find no evidence of genetic differentiation among the populations of LV haplochromines. On genetic distance trees, populations of the same species intermingle with those of different species. At the molecular level, the species are indistinguishable from one another. Genetic comparisons with closely related species in 2 crater lakes indicate that the species within LV continue exchanging genes. These observations have important implications for phylogenetic reconstruction. The approach used in this study is applicable to other instances of adaptive radiation. © The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. All rights reserved.

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Digitial Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1093/molbev/msm138

Disciplines

Biology

Keywords

Gene flow; Adaptive radiation (Evolution); Cichlids; Haplochromis, Hybridization

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