Data from: Lake Tanganyika - a 'melting pot' of ancient and young cichlid lineages (Teleostei: Cichlidae)?
A long history of research focused on the East Africa cichlid radiations (EAR) revealed discrepancies between mtDNA and nuclear phylogenies, suggesting that interspecific hybridisation may have been significant during the radiation of these fishes. The approximately 250 cichlid species of Lake Tanga...
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Zusammenfassung: | A long history of research focused on the East Africa cichlid radiations
(EAR) revealed discrepancies between mtDNA and nuclear phylogenies,
suggesting that interspecific hybridisation may have been significant
during the radiation of these fishes. The approximately 250 cichlid
species of Lake Tanganyika have their roots in a monophyletic African
cichlid assemblage, but controversies remain about the precise
phylogenetic origin and placement of different lineages and consequently
about L. Tanganyika colonization scenarios. 3312 AFLP loci and the
mitochondrial ND2 gene were genotyped for 91 species representing almost
all major lacustrine and riverine haplotilapiine east African cichlid
lineages with a focus on L. Tanganyika endemics. Explicitly testing for
the possibility of ancient hybridisation events, a comprehensive
phylogenetic network hypothesis is proposed for the origin and
diversification of L. Tanganyika cichlids. Inference of discordant
phylogenetic signal strongly suggests that the genomes of two endemic L.
Tanganyika tribes, Eretmodini and Tropheini, are composed of an ancient
mixture of riverine and lacustrine lineages. For the first time a strong
monophyly signal of all non-haplochromine mouthbrooding species endemic to
L. Tanganyika (“ancient mouthbrooders”) was detected. Further, in the
genomes of early diverging L. Tanganyika endemics Trematocarini,
Bathybatini, Hemibatini and Boulengerochromis genetic components of other
lineages belonging to the East African Radiation appear to be present. In
combination with recent palaeo-geological results showing that tectonic
activity in the L. Tanganyika region resulted in highly dynamic and
heterogeneous landscape evolution over the Neogene and Pleistocene, the
novel phylogenetic data render a single lacustrine basin as the
geographical cradle of the endemic L. Tanganyika cichlid lineages
unlikely. Instead a scenario of a pre-rift origin of several independent
L. Tanganyika precursor lineages which diversified in ancient rivers and
precursor lakes and then amalgamated in the extant L. Tanganyika basin is
put forward as an alternative: the 'melting pot Tanganyika'
hypothesis. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.8k0g5 |