High levels of interspecific gene flow in an endemic cichlid fish adaptive radiation from an extreme lake environment

Studying recent adaptive radiations in isolated insular systems avoids complicating causal events and thus may offer clearer insight into mechanisms generating biological diversity. Here, we investigate evolutionary relationships and genomic differentiation within the recent radiation of Alcolapia c...

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Published inMolecular ecology Vol. 24; no. 13; pp. 3421 - 3440
Main Authors Ford, Antonia G. P., Dasmahapatra, Kanchon K., Rüber, Lukas, Gharbi, Karim, Cezard, Timothee, Day, Julia J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.07.2015
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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Summary:Studying recent adaptive radiations in isolated insular systems avoids complicating causal events and thus may offer clearer insight into mechanisms generating biological diversity. Here, we investigate evolutionary relationships and genomic differentiation within the recent radiation of Alcolapia cichlid fish that exhibit extensive phenotypic diversification, and which are confined to the extreme soda lakes Magadi and Natron in East Africa. We generated an extensive RAD data set of 96 individuals from multiple sampling sites and found evidence for genetic admixture between species within Lake Natron, with the highest levels of admixture between sympatric populations of the most recently diverged species. Despite considerable environmental separation, populations within Lake Natron do not exhibit isolation by distance, indicating panmixia within the lake, although individuals within lineages clustered by population in phylogenomic analysis. Our results indicate exceptionally low genetic differentiation across the radiation despite considerable phenotypic trophic variation, supporting previous findings from smaller data sets; however, with the increased power of densely sampled SNPs, we identify genomic peaks of differentiation (FST outliers) between Alcolapia species. While evidence of ongoing gene flow and interspecies hybridization in certain populations suggests that Alcolapia species are incompletely reproductively isolated, the identification of outlier SNPs under diversifying selection indicates the radiation is undergoing adaptive divergence.
Bibliography:istex:A48A44CC2DBECE5F7404C53FCA20F19B6D260815
BBSRC/NERC SynTax
Percy Sladen Memorial Fund
ark:/67375/WNG-T93RZHPV-8
UCL Graduate Scholarship
Table S1. Collection coordinates and sequencing statistics per sample. Table S2. Data subsets and respective analyses conducted on RAD data. Table S3. Population pairwise FST. Table S4. bayescan outlier loci for A. alcalica vs. A. grahami comparison. Table S5. bayescan outlier loci for A. alcalica vs. A. latilabris comparison. Table S6. bayescan outlier loci for A. alcalica vs. A. ndalalani comparison. Table S7. bayescan outlier loci for A. latilabris vs. A. ndalalani comparison. Table S8. Gene annotations of loci identified as outliers in multiple species comparisons. Table S9. Mantel test results for FST vs. geographic distance between sampling sites.Fig. S1. Catchment area of the Natron-Magadi basin. Fig. S2. Plots of linkage disequilibrium dropoff with distance by species. Fig. S3. ML phylogeny for variable sites using the ASC_model. Fig. S4. Majority consensus (50%) ML phylogenies generated from additional RAD data sets. Fig. S5. Species tree generated by SNAPP analysis for selected populations. Fig. S6. Visualization of K = 2-5 for Alcolapia STRUCTURE analysis. Fig. S7. Visualization of K = 2-5 for sympatric Alcolapia STRUCTURE analysis. Fig. S8. Visualization of K = 2-5 for A. alcalica STRUCTURE analysis. Fig. S9. Frequency histograms of sliding-window FST values for pairwise comparisons. Fig. S10. Highest scoring windows in the nonoverlapping window FST analysis. Fig. S11. Mean interspecimen uncorrected p-distance for filtered RAD data from aligned and de novo-assembled reads.
Graduate School Research Project Fund Award
ArticleID:MEC13247
Genetics Society
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0962-1083
1365-294X
DOI:10.1111/mec.13247