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TESTING FOR ANCIENT ADAPTIVE RADIATIONS IN NEOTROPICAL CICHLID FISHES
Authors:Hernán López‐Fernández  Jessica H. Arbour  Kirk. O. Winemiller  Rodney L. Honeycutt
Affiliation:1. Department of Natural History, Royal Ontario Museum, , Toronto, Ontario M5S 2C6, Canada;2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, , Toronto, Ontario M5S 3B2, Canada;3. Section of Ecology, Evolution and Systematic Biology, Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences, Texas A&M University, , Texas 77843;4. Natural Science Division, Pepperdine University, , Malibu, California 90263
Abstract:Most contemporary studies of adaptive radiation focus on relatively recent and geographically restricted clades. It is less clear whether diversification of ancient clades spanning entire continents is consistent with adaptive radiation. We used novel fossil calibrations to generate a chronogram of Neotropical cichlid fishes and to test whether patterns of lineage and morphological diversification are congruent with hypothesized adaptive radiations in South and Central America. We found that diversification in the Neotropical cichlid clade and the highly diverse tribe Geophagini was consistent with diversity‐dependent, early bursts of divergence followed by decreased rates of lineage accumulation. South American Geophagini underwent early rapid differentiation in body shape, expanding into novel morphological space characterized by elongate‐bodied predators. Divergence in head shape attributes associated with trophic specialization evolved under strong adaptive constraints in all Neotropical cichlid clades. The South American Cichlasomatini followed patterns consistent with constant rates of morphological divergence. Although morphological diversification in South American Heroini was limited, Eocene invasion of Central American habitats was followed by convergent diversification mirroring variation observed in Geophagini. Diversification in Neotropical cichlids was influenced by the early adaptive radiation of Geophagini, which potentially limited differentiation in other cichlid clades.
Keywords:Diversification  ecological opportunity  ecomorphology  fossil calibration  relaxed molecular clock
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