• LOGIN
    Login with username and password
Repository logo

BORIS Portal

Bern Open Repository and Information System

  • Publications
  • Theses
  • Research Data
  • Projects
  • Organizations
  • Researchers
  • More
  • Collections
  • Statistics
  • LOGIN
    Login with username and password
Repository logo
Unibern.ch
  1. Home
  2. Publications
  3. Genetic architecture of adaptive radiation across two trophic levels
 

Genetic architecture of adaptive radiation across two trophic levels

Options
  • Details
  • Files
BORIS DOI
10.48350/169722
Publisher DOI
10.1098/rspb.2022.0377
PubMed ID
35506225
Description
Evolution of trophic diversity is a hallmark of adaptive radiation. Yet, transitions between carnivory and herbivory are rare in young adaptive radiations. Haplochromine cichlid fish of the African Great Lakes are exceptional in this regard. Lake Victoria was colonized by an insectivorous generalist and in less than 20 000 years, several clades of specialized herbivores evolved. Carnivorous versus herbivorous lifestyles in cichlids require
many different adaptations in functional morphology, physiology and behaviour.
Ecological transitions in either direction thus require many traits to change in a concerted fashion, which could be facilitated if genomic regions underlying these traits were physically linked or pleiotropic. However, linkage/pleiotropy could also constrain evolvability. To investigate components of the genetic architecture of a suite of traits that distinguish invertivores from algae scrapers, we performed quantitative trait locus
(QTL) mapping using a second-generation hybrid cross. While we found indications of linkage/pleiotropy within trait complexes, QTLs for distinct traits were distributed across several unlinked genomic regions. Thus, a mixture of independently segregating variation and some pleiotropy may underpin the rapid trophic transitions. We argue that the emergence and maintenance of associations between the different genomic regions underpinning co-adapted traits that evolved and persist against some gene flow
required reproductive isolation.
Date of Publication
2022-05-11
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
500 Science > 570 Life sciences; biology
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Feller, Anna Fiona
Institut für Ökologie und Evolution (IEE)
Seehausen, Ole
Institut für Ökologie und Evolution, Aquatische Ökologie
Additional Credits
Institut für Ökologie und Evolution (IEE)
Institut für Ökologie und Evolution, Aquatische Ökologie
Series
Proceedings of the Royal Society. Series B - biological sciences
Publisher
Royal Society of London
ISSN
0962-8452
Access(Rights)
open.access
Show full item
BORIS Portal
Bern Open Repository and Information System
Build: dd892c [ 9.04. 8:30]
Explore
  • Projects
  • Funding
  • Publications
  • Research Data
  • Organizations
  • Researchers
  • Audiovisual Material
  • Software & other digital items
  • Events
More
  • About BORIS Portal
  • Send Feedback
  • Cookie settings
  • Service Policy
Follow us on
  • Mastodon
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
UniBe logo