Kusche Henrik, Elmer Kathryn R, Meyer Axel
Department of Biology, University of Konstanz, 78457, Konstanz, Germany.
International Max Planck Research School for Organismal Biology, University of Konstanz, 78457, Konstanz, Germany.
BMC Biol. 2015 Oct 5;13:82. doi: 10.1186/s12915-015-0192-7.
Color polymorphisms are a conspicuous feature of many species and a way to address broad ecological and evolutionary questions. Three potential major evolutionary fates of color polymorphisms are conceivable over time: maintenance, loss, or speciation. However, the understanding of color polymorphisms and their evolutionary implications is frequently impaired by sex-linkage of coloration, unknown inheritance patterns, difficulties in phenotypic characterization, and a lack of evolutionary replicates. Hence, the role of color polymorphisms in promoting ecological and evolutionary diversification remains poorly understood. In this context, we assessed the ecological and evolutionary consequences of a color polymorphic study system that is not hampered by these restrictions: the repeated adaptive radiations of the gold/dark Midas cichlid fishes (the Amphilophus citrinellus species complex) from the great lakes and crater lakes of Nicaragua, Central America.
We conducted multi-trait morphological and ecological analyses from ten populations of this young adaptive radiation (<6,000 years old), which revealed sympatric ecological differentiation associated with the conspicuous binary (gold/dark) color polymorphism. Varying degrees of intraspecific ecological divergence were observed across the ten color morph pairs, but most pairs exhibited a consistently parallel ecological and evolutionary trajectory across populations. Specifically, gold Midas cichlids are frequently deeper-bodied, have more robust pharyngeal jaws, and feed at a lower trophic level compared to conspecific, sympatric dark individuals. A common garden experiment suggests there is a genetic correlation of color and eco-morphological traits.
We demonstrate unprecedented ecological and evolutionary consequences of color polymorphism in this adaptive radiation. Across the species complex, sympatric conspecific individuals differed in eco-morphology depending on color morph (gold/dark) and the axis of differentiation tended to be consistent across replicates. The consistent divergence across wild populations and the common garden experiment suggests that color is genetically correlated to ecology. Because Midas cichlids are known to mate color assortatively, the putative genetic correlation of this color polymorphism with an eco-morphological divergence suggests an innate potential to promote ecological and evolutionary divergence across this species complex. However, there are to date no examples of speciation based on color in this radiation, suggesting long-term maintenance of this color polymorphism.
颜色多态性是许多物种的一个显著特征,也是解决广泛的生态和进化问题的一种方式。随着时间的推移,颜色多态性可能存在三种潜在的主要进化命运:维持、丧失或物种形成。然而,对颜色多态性及其进化意义的理解常常受到颜色的性连锁、未知的遗传模式、表型特征描述的困难以及缺乏进化重复样本的影响。因此,颜色多态性在促进生态和进化多样化中的作用仍知之甚少。在此背景下,我们评估了一个不受这些限制的颜色多态性研究系统的生态和进化后果:来自中美洲尼加拉瓜大湖和火山口湖的金色/深色麦达斯丽鱼(Amphilophus citrinellus物种复合体)的多次适应性辐射。
我们对这个年轻的适应性辐射(<6000年)的十个种群进行了多性状形态和生态分析,结果显示与显著的二元(金色/深色)颜色多态性相关的同域生态分化。在十对颜色形态中观察到了不同程度的种内生态分歧,但大多数对在不同种群中表现出一致的平行生态和进化轨迹。具体而言,与同域的深色同种个体相比,金色麦达斯丽鱼通常身体更深,咽颌更粗壮,且在较低的营养级觅食。一项共同花园实验表明颜色与生态形态特征之间存在遗传相关性。
我们证明了这种适应性辐射中颜色多态性前所未有的生态和进化后果。在整个物种复合体中,同域的同种个体在生态形态上因颜色形态(金色/深色)而异,并且分化轴在重复样本中往往是一致的。野生种群之间一致的分歧以及共同花园实验表明颜色与生态在遗传上相关。由于已知麦达斯丽鱼会按颜色进行择偶,这种颜色多态性与生态形态分歧之间假定的遗传相关性表明,在这个物种复合体中存在促进生态和进化分歧的内在潜力。然而,迄今为止在这种辐射中尚无基于颜色形成物种的例子,这表明这种颜色多态性得以长期维持。