Data from: Evolution and diversity of two cisco forms in an outlet of glacial Lake Algonquin
The diversity of Laurentian Great Lakes ciscoes (Coregonus artedi, sensu lato) arose via repeated local adaptive divergence including deepwater ciscoes that are now extirpated or threatened. The nigripinnis form, or Blackfin Cisco, is extirpated from the Great Lakes and remains only in Lake Nipigon....
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Zusammenfassung: | The diversity of Laurentian Great Lakes ciscoes (Coregonus artedi, sensu
lato) arose via repeated local adaptive divergence including deepwater
ciscoes that are now extirpated or threatened. The nigripinnis form, or
Blackfin Cisco, is extirpated from the Great Lakes and remains only in
Lake Nipigon. Putative nigripinnis populations were recently discovered in
sympatry with artedi in a historical drainage system of glacial Lake
Algonquin, the precursor of Lakes Michigan and Huron. Given the apparent
convergence on Great Lakes form, we labelled this form blackfin. Here, we
test the hypothesis that nigripinnis may have colonized this area from the
Great Lakes as a distinct lineage. It would then represent a relict
occurrence of the historical diversity of Great Lakes ciscoes.
Alternatively, blackfin could have evolved in situ in several lakes. We
captured more than 600 individuals in the benthic or pelagic habitat in 14
lakes in or near Algonquin Provincial Park (Ontario, Canada). Fish were
compared based on habitat, morphology and genetic variation at 6676 SNPs.
Contrary to our expectations, both cisco and blackfin belonged to an
Atlantic lineage that colonized the area from the east, not from the Great
Lakes. Sympatric cisco and blackfin were closely related while fish from
different lakes were genetically differentiated, strongly suggesting the
repeated in situ origin of each form. Across lakes, there was a continuum
of ecological, morphological and genetic differentiation that could be
associated with alternative resources and lake characteristics. This study
uncovers a new component of cisco diversity in inland lakes of Canada that
evolved independently from ciscoes of the Laurentian Great lakes. The
diversity of cisco revealed in this study and across their Canadian range
presents a challenge for designating conservation units at the
intraspecific level within the framework of the Committee on the Status of
Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC). |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.hm4558q |