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Shifting barriers and phenotypic diversification by hybridisation
Authors:Kristina M Sefc  Karin Mattersdorfer  Angelika Ziegelbecker  Nina Neuhüttler  Oliver Steiner  Walter Goessler  Stephan Koblmüller
Institution:1. Institute of Zoology, University of Graz, Graz, Austria;2. Institute of Chemistry – Analytical Chemistry, University of Graz, Graz, Austria
Abstract:The establishment of hybrid taxa relies on reproductive isolation from the parental forms, typically achieved by ecological differentiation. Here, we present an alternative mechanism, in which shifts in the strength and location of dispersal barriers facilitate diversification by hybridisation. Our case study concerns the highly diverse, stenotopic rock‐dwelling cichlids of the African Great Lakes, many of which display geographic colour pattern variation. The littoral habitat of these fish has repeatedly been restructured in the course of ancient lake level fluctuations. Genetic data and an experimental cross support the hybrid origin of a distinct yellow‐coloured variant of Tropheus moorii from ancient admixture between two allopatric, red and bluish variants. Deficient assortative mating preferences imply that reproductive isolation continues to be contingent on geographic separation. Linking paleolimnological data with the establishment of the hybrid variant, we sketch a selectively neutral diversification process governed solely by rearrangements of dispersal barriers.
Keywords:Carotenoid coloration  Cichlidae  climate change  colour pattern  environmental fluctuations  genetic admixture  hybrid speciation  Lake Tanganyika  mate choice  Tropheus
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