Title: Ecological speciation in lake organisms
1Ecological speciation in lake organisms
2Outline
- What is a species?
- How does speciation work?
- Natural Selection
- Fundamental Theorem of Natural Selection
- What is ecological speciation?
- Environmental Differences
- Sexual Selection
- Ecological Interaction
- Examples
- 1. Cichlid diversity and background
- Case Study - Cichlid Fish Diversity Threatened by
Eutrophication That Curbs Sexual Selection - Stickleback diversity and background
- Case Study - Evidence for ecologys role in
speciation
3What is a species?
- Ernst Mayers biological species concept
Species are groups of interbreeding natural
populations that are reproductively isolated from
other such groups - Distinct species
- 1. Genetic differences prevents species from
living in the same area - Can inhabit the same area but genetic
differences prevent fertile hybrids
4What is a species?
- Species are maintained by isolating
barriers, or those biological features of
organisms that impede the exchange of genes with
members of other populations
5What is a species?
- Isolating barriers
- Prezygotic Barriers
- Premating
- - habitat isolation, temporal isolation,
behavioral isolation - Postmating
- - mechanical isolation, gametic
isolation - Postzygotic Barriers
- - hybrid inviability, hybrid sterility,
 hybrid - breakdown
6How does speciation work?
- Natural Selection
- Reproductive success in the long term
- Differential mortality there is competition
among progeny for survival - Differential Reproduction because there is
competition some variants will be better adapted,
compete more successfully and leave more
offspring. These variants will comprise the next
generation
7How does speciation work?
- The Fundamental Theorem of Natural Selection
- Some individuals will produce more offspring that
survive and reach maturity than others - These individuals are best adapted, they are
best able to survive and reproduce an a given
environment - The genes of such individuals will predominate in
the following generations -
8How does speciation work?
- 4. When the environment changes the original
types become less adapted and variant types, by
chance may, be better adapted ? spread ? species
change - EVOLUTION
- 5. Therefore adaptation is evolution
9What is Non-Ecological Speciation?
- Reproductive isolation
- Genetic drift
- Founder effect
- Random fixation of alleles
10What is Ecological Speciation?
- ?The process by which barriers to gene flow
evolve between populations as a result of
ecologically-based divergent selection. - Ecologically-based divergent selection
interaction of individuals with their environment
during resource acquisition - ?Barriers to gene flow are ecological in nature
11What is Ecological Speciation?
- Ecological causes as a source of divergent
- selection
- Environmental differences
- 2. Sexual selection
- 3. Ecological interactions
12What is Ecological Speciation?
- Environmental differences
- Speciation is caused by adaptation to different
environments - Divergent selection between environments affects
specific phenotypic traits causing reproductive
isolation by means of sexual isolation
13What is Ecological Speciation?
- Environmental differences
- Allopatric speciation
- a population splits into two geographically
isolated populations and then diverges - Sympatric Speciation
- species diverge while
- inhabiting the same place
14What is Ecological Speciation?
- Sexual selection
- Acts on traits directly involved in mate
recognition - Differences in mate preferences divergent
selection between environments - Divergent selection between environments
- - spatial variation in natural
selection on secondary sexual traits - - mating or communication systems
15What is Ecological Speciation?
- Ecological interactions
- Interactions
- Interspecific competition
- Mutualism
- Facilitation
- Occur in sympatry
- Frequency dependent - individual fitness depends
on the frequency of the various phenotypes
16Cichlid Fish Diversity in Lake Victoria
- Located on the border of Uganda, Kenya and
Tanzania - Lake Victoria is the worlds largest tropical lake
and the second largest freshwater lake -
17 Cichlid Fish Diversity in Lake Victoria
- Cichlid fish species evolved rapidly in 12,400
years - Differ in the size and shape of their bodies,
head morphology, male breeding coloration,
trophic specialization and breeding behavior - Mouth parts have evolved to suit different eating
patterns
18Cichlid Fish Diversity in Lake Victoria
- Cichlid species of the lake Victoria basin are
collectively referred to as thehaplochromines - Common ancestor of the tribe Haplochromini in
lake Tanganyika
19Cichlid Fish Diversity in Lake Victoria
20Cichlid Fish Diversity in Lake Victoria
- Three stages of Cichlid radiation
- a.Habitat divergence - evolution of distinct
rock- and sand-dwelling clades - Adaptation to different microhabitats
- b. Elaboration of morphologically distinct genera
- differentiation of the feeding apparatus by
natural selection - Ecological selection on trophic morphology
- c. Color pattern
- Sexual selection on color pattern
21Cichlid Fish Diversity in Lake Victoria
- Evolutionary genomics
- Jaw shape
- Tooth shape
- Color pattern
- Visual sensitivity
22Cichlid Fish Diversity in Lake Victoria
- Selection Pressures
- Ecological selection
- different modes of feeding
- habitat preferences
- behavioral niche partitioning
23Cichlid Fish Diversity in Lake Victoria
- Selection Pressures
- Sexual Selection
- Females maternal mouth brooders
- Males contribute genes
- Asymmetric parenting strong sexual selection,
sexual dimorphisms, life history and dispersal
24 Cichlid Fish Diversity in Lake Victoria
- Selection Pressures
- Sexual Selection
- male traits evolve in response to female mate
preferences - a rapid co-evolution of male traits and female
preferences - Sexual selection can also lead to sympatric
speciation
25Case Studies Cichlid Fish Diversity in Lake
Victoria
- Sympatric Speciation Models
- Allele for reversed female preference could
invade and cause rapid sympatric speciation
within small populations - Male dispersal depends on mating success, and
leads to linkage disequilibrium and an
acceleration of Fishers process (runaway
evolution of male traits and female mating
preferences under sexual selection) - Coupled sexual selection and niche differentiation
26Cichlid Fish Diversity in Lake Victoria
- Selection Pressures
- Genetic conflicts
- Selfish genetic elements, such as transposons,
- replicate to high copy numbers unless they
- are opposed by another form of selection
- The genes that are most often in conflict
- in different cellular compartments
- inherited asymmetrically
27Case Studies
- Cichlid Fish Diversity Threatened by
Eutrophication That Curbs Sexual Selection - Seehausen, et al. 1997
28Case Studies
- Hypothesis
- Dull Cichlid fish coloration,few color
morphs, and low species diversity in turbid areas
as a result of recent eutrophication - of Lake Victoria
29Case Studies
- Eyes equipped with three retinal cone pigments -
cover the light spectrum from blue to red - Sympatric species - male coloration at opposite
- ends of the color spectrum
- Dichotomy among male color morphs matches the
two absorbance peaks of retinal pigments
30Case Studies
- Is individual variation in color vision
- responsible for dichotomy in male coloration?
- Is variation in color vision responsible for
color dichotomy maintenance?
31Case Studies
- Male red/blue coloration most intense when
effect of red and blue color signals visually
enhanced - ? broad spectrumilluminated water
- ? sufficiently red and blue downwelling light
contrasts against yellowish sidewelling light - METHODS
- Female preference of sympatric red/blue sibling
species under broad spectrum and monochromatic
lights
32Case Studies
- RESULTS
- Horizontal line equal reflectance of red and
- blue
- Above line red more reflected than blue
- Below line blue is more reflected than red
Nyererei Neochromis
Ratio of Reflectance
Width of Transmission Spectrum (nm)
Hue of body colors as a function of light
transmission
33Case Studies
- RESULTS
- Broad spectrum illumination
- conspecific (same species) over
heterospecific (different species) males - Monochromatic light (color differences masked)
- mated indiscriminately
34Case Studies
- CONCLUSION
- Haplochromine cichlids choose mates on the
- basis of coloration
- ? Sexual isolation maintained by color
preference -
-
35Case Studies
- Is male coloration determined by sexual
selection? - More brightly colored males in highly transparent
water - Easier target for predators
- - Suggests against natural
selection - hypothesis
- Therefore male coloration is most likely
determined by sexual selection -
- Light conditions constrain this choice
- then light should limit number of sexually
isolated species and the number of color morphs
36Case Studies
- Does increasing turbidity, curb the impact of
sexual selection on sexual isolation ? - Is that responsible for the decline in cichlid
diversity? -
37Case Studies
- METHODS
- Examined spectral bandwidth at 2 m water
depth and the number of coexisting haplochromine
cichlid species
38Case Studies
- RESULTS
- Clearer water broader spectrum of
transmitted light more color morphs of a
species more species of a genus
Relation between bandwidth of the transmission
spectrum and cichlid diversity
39Case Studies
- CONCLUSION
- Turbid waters monochromatic light conditions
only one drab-colored species breakdown of
reproductive barriers decrease in diversity
40Case Studies
- Eutrophication caused by
- Deforestation
- Agricultural practices
- Predation of Nile perch
- Industrialization and urbanization
41Stickleback Diversity
- Restricted to Northern Hemisphere and margins of
Atlantic and Pacific Oceans - Very phenotypically diverse
- ? marine, anadromous and freshwater populations
- Broad geographical and ecological distribution
42Stickleback Diversity
- Anadromous, Marine
- Changed little in the past 10 million years
- Limited geographical variation
- Stream Resident
- Founded repeatedly from marine and anadromous
populations - Post-glacial isolates ? huge adaptive
- radiation
43Stickleback Diversity
- No sustained evolutionary divergence
- no widespread, phenotypically distinct
species - Highly divergent populations selective
extinction - ? endemic specialized for small, isolated
habitats that quickly dry up
44Case Studies
- Evidence for ecologys role in speciation
- McKinnon et al. 2004
45Case Studies
- Stream-resident threespine stickleback
- Stream populations from different regions are
phenotypically similar - Smaller in size
46Case Studies
- Anadromous threespine stickleback
- Ancestral
- Persistent
- Geographically widespread marine habitats
- Larger in size
47Case Studies
- Have stream ecotypes evolved repeatedly from
anadromous ecotypes? - Microsatellite data closer relationships
between geographically adjacent populations than
same ecotype - ? stream populations evolved
- repeatedly from anadromous
populations - Allozymes and mitochondrial DNA sequences
- ? replicated origins of freshwater
populations from - anadromous ancestors
48Case Studies
- Hypothesis
- Assortative mating based on body size in
stickleback populations evolved according to the
environment - Ecological differences divergent selection on
small number of phenotypic traits ? by product
speciation
49Case Studies
- METHODS
- 1.Collected individuals for mating trials from
geographically distant regions (Alaska, British
Columbia, Iceland (stream only), Scotland, Norway
(stream only) and Japan) - ? assess reproductive compatibility or isolation
- Mating of same ecotypes
- Mating of different ecotypes
- Mating within and between regions
50Case Studies
- METHODS
- 2.Experimental manipulation of body size
- Raised large/small females of each ecotype
- by altering growing periods
- Tested mating patterns using field collected
males - ? Mating with different sized ecotypes
51Case Studies
- RESULTS
- Courtship gt twice as successful between pairs of
the same ecotype - Female stream and anadromous sticklebacks
preferred males of own ecotype
52Case Studies
- RESULTS
- Mating compatibility negative relationship with
mean length difference - Preference of male ecotype depends on female size
- Females retained weak preference for males of
own ecotype
53Case Studies
- CONCLUSION
- Adaptation to different environments
reproductive isolation - Confirmed connection between size divergence and
the build-up of reproductive isolation - Traits other than size make a secondary
contribution to reproductive isolation
54Questions?
55References
- Bell, M.A. (2001).Lateral plate evolution in the
threespine stickleback getting nowhere fast.
Genetica 112113 445461 - Kocher T.D. (2004). Adaptive evolution and
explosive speciation the Cichlid fish model.
Nature, 5288-298 - Krebs C.J. (2001). Ecology. Benjamin
Cummings.ch.2. - McKinnon, J. S., Mori, S., Blackman, B. K..
David, L.. Kingsley, D. M., Jamieson, L., Chou,
J.. Schluter, D.(2004) Evidence for ecology's
role in speciation. Nature, 429, 294-298 - Rundlel H.D. and Nosil P. (2005). Ecological
speciation. Ecology, 8 336352 - Schluter D. (1995). Ecological speciation in
postglacial fishes. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond.
351807-8-14 - Seehausen, O., van Alphen, J.J.M., Witte, F.
(1997). Cichlid fish diversity threatened by
eutrophication that curbs sexual selection.
Nature 2771808-1811