9 results on '"Tropheus"'
Search Results
2. AFLP genome scans suggest divergent selection on colour patterning in allopatric colour morphs of a cichlid fish
- Author
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Karin Mattersdorfer, Kristina M. Sefc, and Stephan Koblmüller
- Subjects
Genetics ,education.field_of_study ,genetic structures ,biology ,fungi ,Population ,Allopatric speciation ,Locus (genetics) ,Cline (biology) ,biology.organism_classification ,Tropheus moorii ,Cichlid ,Evolutionary biology ,Tropheus ,Genetic structure ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Genome scan-based tests for selection are directly applicable to natural populations to study the genetic and evolutionary mechanisms behind phenotypic differentiation. We conducted AFLP genome scans in three distinct geographic colour morphs of the cichlid fish Tropheus moorii to assess whether the extant, allopatric colour pattern differentiation can be explained by drift and to identify markers mapping to genomic regions possibly involved in colour patterning. The tested morphs occupy adjacent shore sections in southern Lake Tanganyika and are separated from each other by major habitat barriers. The genome scans revealed significant genetic structure between morphs, but a very low proportion of loci fixed for alternative AFLP alleles in different morphs. This high level of polymorphism within morphs suggested that colour pattern differentiation did not result exclusively from neutral processes. Outlier detection methods identified six loci with excess differentiation in the comparison between a bluish and a yellow-blotch morph and five different outlier loci in comparisons of each of these morphs with a red morph. As population expansions and the genetic structure of Tropheus make the outlier approach prone to false-positive signals of selection, we examined the correlation between outlier locus alleles and colour phenotypes in a genetic and phenotypic cline between two morphs. Distributions of allele frequencies at one outlier locus were indeed consistent with linkage to a colour locus. Despite the challenges posed by population structure and demography, our results encourage the cautious application of genome scans to studies of divergent selection in subdivided and recently expanded populations.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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3. Separated by sand, fused by dropping water: habitat barriers and fluctuating water levels steer the evolution of rock-dwelling cichlid populations in Lake Tanganyika
- Author
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Kristina M. Sefc, Beate Obermüller, Eva Eigner, Christian Sturmbauer, Stephan Koblmüller, and Walter Salzburger
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0106 biological sciences ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Ecology ,Demographic history ,Population ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Water level ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tropheus moorii ,Habitat ,13. Climate action ,Cichlid ,Tropheus ,Genetics ,Littoral zone ,14. Life underwater ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
The conditions of phenotypic and genetic population differentiation allow inferences about the evolution, preservation and loss of biological diversity. In Lake Tanganyika, water level fluctuations are assumed to have had a major impact on the evolution of stenotopic littoral species, though this hypothesis has not been specifically examined so far. The present study investigates whether subtly differentiated colour patterns of adjacent Tropheus moorii populations are maintained in isolation or in the face of continuous gene flow, and whether the presumed influence of water level fluctuations on lacustrine cichlids can be demonstrated in the small-scale population structure of the strictly stenotopic, littoral Tropheus. Distinct population differentiation was found even across short geographic distances and minor habitat barriers. Population splitting chronology and demographic histories comply with our expectation of old and rather stable populations on steeper sloping shore, and more recently established populations in a shallower region. Moreover, population expansions seem to coincide with lake level rises in the wake of Late Pleistocene megadroughts ~100 KYA. The imprint of hydrologic events on current population structure in the absence of ongoing gene flow suggests that phenotypic differentiation among proximate Tropheus populations evolves and persists in genetic isolation. Sporadic gene flow is effected by lake level fluctuations following climate changes and controlled by the persistence of habitat barriers during lake level changes. Since similar demographic patterns were previously reported for Lake Malawi cichlids, our data furthermore strengthen the hypothesis that major climatic events synchronized facets of cichlid evolution across the East African Great Lakes.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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4. Zur Soziologie des Brabantbuntbarsches Tropheus moorei (Pisces, Cichlidae)
- Author
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Wolfgang Wickler
- Subjects
biology ,Tropheus ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2010
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5. Explosive speciation in cichlid fishes of the African Great Lakes: a dynamic model of adaptive radiation
- Author
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Christian Sturmbauer
- Subjects
biology ,Ecotype ,Ecology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Tropheus moorii ,Speciation ,Habitat ,Cichlid ,Adaptive radiation ,Tropheus ,Lamprologini ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common - Abstract
In the African cichlid species flocks several corresponding ecotypes and species communities have evolved independently in each of the lakes. These flocks can be viewed as reiterations of a process, induced by the same type of external event (the formation of a lake) and seeded by the same group of organisms, equipped with the same innovative potential. The East African lakes differ in their ages, so that different stages of adaptive radiation of a single group of fishes can be studied simultaneously. This review combines findings on various African cichlid species flocks and derives a generalized model of cichlid adaptive radiation. The model constitutes four stages, defined by the most influential habitat characteristics and interactions among members of the species community at each phase. It is an attempt to provide an explicit hypothesis for a dynamic evolutionary process, as a basis to future studies.
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- 1998
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6. New palaeogeographic and lake‐level reconstructions of Lake Tanganyika: implications for tectonic, climatic and biological evolution in a rift lake
- Author
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Jean-Jacques Tiercelin, K. E. Lezzar, Michael J. Soreghan, and Andrew S. Cohen
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Shore ,geography ,Rift ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Pleistocene ,Outcrop ,Geology ,Structural basin ,biology.organism_classification ,Paleontology ,Tropheus ,Glacial period ,Lamprologini - Abstract
Palaeogeographic and lake-level reconstructions provide powerful tools for evaluating competing scenarios of biotic, climatic and geological evolution within a lake basin. Here we present new reconstructions for the northern Lake Tanganyika subbasins, based on reflection seismic, core and outcrop data. Reflection seismic radiocarbon method (RSRM) age estimates provide a chronological model for these reconstructions, against which yet to be obtained age dates based on core samples can be compared. A complex history of hydrological connections and changes in shoreline configuration in northern Lake Tanganyika has resulted from a combination of volcanic doming, border fault evolution and climatically induced lake-level fluctuations. The stratigraphic expression of lake-level highstands and lowstands in Lake Tanganyika is predictable and cyclic (referred to here as Capart Cycles), but in a pattern that di ers profoundly from the classic Van Houten cycles of some Newark Supergroup rift basins. This di erence results from the extraordinary topographic relief of the Western Rift lakes, coupled with the rapidity of large-scale lake-level fluctuations. Major unconformity surfaces associated with Lake Tanganyika lowstands may have corresponded with high-latitude glacial maxima throughout much of the mid- to late Pleistocene. Rocky shorelines along the eastern side of the present-day Ubwari Peninsula (Zaire) appear to have had a much more continuous existence as littoral rock habitats than similar areas along the north-western coastline of the lake (adjacent to the Uvira Border Fault System), which in turn are older than the rocky shorelines of the north-east coast of Burundi. This model of palaeogeographic history will be of great help to biologists trying to clarify the evolution of endemic invertebrates and fish in the northern basin of Lake Tanganyika.
- Published
- 1997
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7. Widespread geographical distribution of mitochondrial haplotypes in rock-dwelling cichlid fishes from Lake Tanganyika
- Author
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L. L. Knowles, Axel Meyer, and Erik Verheyen
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Population ,Fresh Water ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Simochromis ,Species Specificity ,Cichlid ,Adaptive radiation ,Tropheus ,Consensus Sequence ,Genetics ,Animals ,education ,Phylogeny ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography ,media_common ,education.field_of_study ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Base Sequence ,Geography ,biology ,Ecology ,Africa, Eastern ,biology.organism_classification ,Speciation ,Phylogeography ,Haplotypes ,Perches ,Evolutionary biology ,Genetic structure ,human activities - Abstract
The spectacularly diverse cichlid fish species flocks of the East African Rift Lakes have elicited much debate on the potential evolutionary mechanisms responsible for the origin of these adaptive radiations. An historical perspective on population structure may offer insights into the processes driving population differentiation and possibly speciation. Here, we examine mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence variation in two endemic species of rock-dwelling cichlids, Simochromis babaulti and S. diagramma, from Lake Tanganyika. Phylogeographic analyses were used to infer what factors might have been important in the genetic structuring of Simochromis populations. Patterns of mtDNA differentiation in Simochromis were compared to those of other rock-dwelling cichlids to distinguish between competing hypotheses concerning the processes underlying their evolution. In striking contrast to previous findings, populations of Simochromis, even those separated by up to 300 km, were found to share mitochondrial DNA haplotypes. There is no correspondence between mtDNA genealogies and the geographical distribution of populations. Only S. babaulti, but not S. diagramma was found to have a significant association between genetic and geographical distance. These phylogeographic patterns suggest that the evolutionary effects of abiotic and biotic factors shaping population genetic structure may differ substantially even among closely related species of rock-dwelling cichlids. Physical events and barriers to gene flow that are believed to have had a major impact on the geographical distribution and intralacustrine speciation of Tropheus do not seem to have equally strongly affected its close relative Simochromis. These findings emphasize that no single mechanism can be responsible for the formation of population structure, speciation, and the adaptive radiation of all cichlid fishes.
- Published
- 1996
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8. Vertical distributions of two herbivorous cichlid fishes of the genus Tropheus in Lake Tanganyika, Africa
- Author
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Masanori Kohda and Y. Yanagisawa
- Subjects
Water depth ,Herbivore ,Ecology ,Genus ,Cichlid ,Tropheus ,Dominance (ecology) ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 1992
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9. Gastritis in Lake Tanganyika cichlids (Tropheus duboisii)
- Author
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S Rosendal, HW Ferguson, and S Groom
- Subjects
Zoology ,Fish Diseases ,Decapoda ,Ampicillin ,Tropheus ,Escherichia coli ,medicine ,Animals ,Clostridium ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Ecology ,Fishes ,Clostridium hastiforme ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Animal Feed ,Gastric Mucosa ,Gastritis ,%22">Fish ,Protozoa ,Aeromonas ,medicine.symptom ,Granulomatous Gastritis ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Necrotic and granulomatous gastritis is described in Lake Tanganyika cichlids. Clostridium hastiforme and flagellated protozoa were both associated with the reaction but the significance of either is unknown. Nevertheless, treatment of surviving fish with ampicillin was carried out and mortalities ceased. The possible involvement of an unsuitable diet as a predisposing factor is discussed.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
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