Cycles of fusion and fission enabled rapid parallel adaptive radiations in African cichlids.

Meier, Joana; McGee, Matthew D; Marques, David A; Mwaiko, Salome; Kishe, Mary; Wandera, Sylvester; Neumann, Dirk; Mrosso, Hilary; Chapman, Lauren J; Chapman, Colin A; Kaufman, Les; Taabu-Munyaho, Anthony; Wagner, Catherine E; Bruggmann, Rémy; Excoffier, Laurent; Seehausen, Ole (2023). Cycles of fusion and fission enabled rapid parallel adaptive radiations in African cichlids. Science, 381(6665), eade2833. American Association for the Advancement of Science 10.1126/science.ade2833

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Although some lineages of animals and plants have made impressive adaptive radiations when provided with ecological opportunity, the propensities to radiate vary profoundly among lineages for unknown reasons. In Africa's Lake Victoria region, one cichlid lineage radiated in every lake, with the largest radiation taking place in a lake less than 16,000 years old. We show that all of its ecological guilds evolved in situ. Cycles of lineage fusion through admixture and lineage fission through speciation characterize the history of the radiation. It was jump-started when several swamp-dwelling refugial populations, each of which were of older hybrid descent, met in the newly forming lake, where they fused into a single population, resuspending old admixture variation. Each population contributed a different set of ancient alleles from which a new adaptive radiation assembled in record time, involving additional fusion-fission cycles. We argue that repeated fusion-fission cycles in the history of a lineage make adaptive radiation fast and predictable.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

08 Faculty of Science > Department of Biology > Institute of Ecology and Evolution (IEE)
08 Faculty of Science > Department of Biology > Institute of Ecology and Evolution (IEE) > Population Genetics
08 Faculty of Science > Department of Biology > Institute of Ecology and Evolution (IEE) > Aquatic Ecology
08 Faculty of Science > Department of Biology > Bioinformatics and Computational Biology

UniBE Contributor:

Meier, Joana, Mc Gee, Matthew David, Marques, David Alexander, Bruggmann, Rémy, Excoffier, Laurent, Seehausen, Ole

Subjects:

500 Science > 570 Life sciences; biology
000 Computer science, knowledge & systems

ISSN:

1095-9203

Publisher:

American Association for the Advancement of Science

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

02 Oct 2023 13:17

Last Modified:

03 Oct 2023 09:47

Publisher DOI:

10.1126/science.ade2833

PubMed ID:

37769075

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/186783

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/186783

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