Center of Natural History (CeNak), Universität Hamburg, Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3, 20146, Hamburg, Germany.
Zoological Institute of the Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Am Botanischen Garten 9, 24118, Kiel, Germany.
BMC Ecol Evol. 2021 Mar 3;21(1):35. doi: 10.1186/s12862-021-01754-4.
Lake Tanganyika belongs to the East African Great Lakes and is well known for harbouring a high proportion of endemic and morphologically distinct genera, in cichlids but also in paludomid gastropods. With about 50 species these snails form a flock of high interest because of its diversity, the question of its origin and the evolutionary processes that might have resulted in its elevated amount of taxa. While earlier debates centred on these paludomids to be a result of an intralacustrine adaptive radiation, there are strong indications for the existence of several lineages before the lake formation. To evaluate hypotheses on the evolution and radiation the detection of actual adaptations is however crucial. Since the Tanganyikan gastropods show distinct radular tooth morphologies hypotheses about potential trophic specializations are at hand.
Here, based on a phylogenetic tree of the paludomid species from Lake Tanganyika and adjacent river systems, the mechanical properties of their teeth were evaluated by nanoindentation, a method measuring the hardness and elasticity of a structure, and related with the gastropods' specific feeding substrate (soft, solid, mixed). Results identify mechanical adaptations in the tooth cusps to the substrate and, with reference to the tooth morphology, assign distinct functions (scratching or gathering) to tooth types. Analysing pure tooth morphology does not consistently reflect ecological specializations, but the mechanical properties allow the determination of eco-morphotypes.
In almost every lineage we discovered adaptations to different substrates, leading to the hypothesis that one main engine of the flock's evolution is trophic specialization, establishing distinct ecological niches and allowing the coexistence of taxa.
坦噶尼喀湖属于东非大裂谷,以拥有高比例的特有属和形态独特的属而闻名,不仅在慈鲷科鱼类中,而且在沼螺科腹足纲动物中也是如此。这些蜗牛约有 50 种,因其多样性、起源问题以及可能导致其分类群数量增加的进化过程而成为一个引人关注的群体。虽然早期的争论集中在这些沼螺是湖泊内适应性辐射的结果,但有强烈的迹象表明,在湖泊形成之前就存在着几个谱系。为了评估关于进化和辐射的假设,检测实际的适应是至关重要的。由于坦噶尼喀湖的腹足类动物表现出明显的齿舌形态,因此关于潜在的营养特化的假设就在眼前。
在这里,基于坦噶尼喀湖及其毗邻河流系统的沼螺物种的系统发育树,通过纳米压痕法评估了它们牙齿的机械性能,这是一种测量结构硬度和弹性的方法,并与腹足类动物的特定摄食基质(软、硬、混合)有关。结果表明,牙齿的齿尖对基质有机械适应性,并根据牙齿形态将不同的功能(刮擦或收集)分配给不同的齿型。单纯分析牙齿形态并不能一致反映生态特化,但机械性能可以确定生态形态型。
在几乎每一个谱系中,我们都发现了对不同基质的适应,这导致了一个主要的假设,即群体进化的一个主要动力是营养特化,它建立了不同的生态位,允许分类群共存。