Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research, University of Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada.
Integr Comp Biol. 2011 Oct;51(4):634-43. doi: 10.1093/icb/icr101. Epub 2011 Aug 19.
Ancient lakes have provided considerable insights into the drivers of speciation and adaptive radiation in aquatic organisms. Most studies of species-flocks, however, focus only on a single group of organisms, and few have attempted to integrate geological, limnological, ecological, and genetic drivers of speciation on multiple species-flocks at various trophic levels. As such, there is a need for a comprehensive model system for research on speciation in aquatic environments where multiple radiations are investigated at various levels of biological organization (e.g., individual, population, and ecosystem) and placed in light of geographical and geological setting. The ancient Malili Lakes of Sulawesi, Indonesia, are ideal candidates for such a model, and represent the only hydrologically connected ancient lakes in the world. These lakes are characterized by ultra-oligotrophy and unique physicochemical conditions that govern the composition and production of planktonic communities. At higher trophic levels, there are three recurring trends: (1) low taxonomic richness and simple community structures, (2) adaptive radiations with trophic specialization, and (3) remarkably high endemism with evolutionary innovations throughout the lakes and species-flocks. Furthermore, the restricted geographic distributions of species-flocks within the Malili Lakes indicate that each lake constitutes a unique environment, and dispersal among lakes is limited, despite close contemporary connectivity. These observations suggest that ecological and evolutionary processes are regulated from the bottom up, and speciation is primarily facilitated by interspecific and intraspecific competition for limited resources. The Malili Lakes represent an outstanding natural model for integrative research into speciation as they offer the opportunity to explore the roles of geography, dispersal, and selection in the radiation of aquatic organisms.
古湖泊为水生生物的物种形成和适应辐射提供了重要的见解。然而,大多数物种群研究仅关注单一生物群体,很少有研究试图整合物种形成的地质、湖沼学、生态学和遗传驱动因素,以及在不同营养层次的多个物种群中。因此,需要一个综合的水生环境物种形成研究模型系统,在该系统中,在不同的生物组织层次(如个体、种群和生态系统)上研究多个辐射,并结合地理和地质背景进行研究。印度尼西亚苏拉威西岛的古老马利利湖就是这样一个理想的候选模型,它是世界上唯一一个在水文上相互连接的古湖泊。这些湖泊的特点是超寡营养和独特的物理化学条件,这些条件控制着浮游生物群落的组成和生产力。在更高的营养层次上,存在三个反复出现的趋势:(1)低分类丰富度和简单的群落结构,(2)具有营养特化的适应性辐射,以及(3)在整个湖泊和物种群中都存在惊人的高特有性和进化创新。此外,马利利湖内物种群的有限地理分布表明,每个湖泊构成了一个独特的环境,尽管湖泊之间存在紧密的当代连通性,但湖泊之间的扩散受到限制。这些观察结果表明,生态和进化过程是自下而上调节的,物种形成主要是通过有限资源的种间和种内竞争来促进的。马利利湖是一个极好的自然模型,可用于综合研究物种形成,因为它提供了探索地理、扩散和选择在水生生物辐射中的作用的机会。