Abstract

The origin of species is a central topic in biology. Ecological speciation might be a driver in adaptive radiation, providing a framework for understanding mechanisms, level, and rate of diversification. The Arctic charr Salvelinus alpinus L. is a polymorphic species with huge morphological and life‐history diversity in Holarctic water systems. We studied adaptive radiation of Arctic charr in the 460‐m‐deep Lake Tinnsjøen to (a) document eco‐morphology and life‐history traits of morphs, (b) estimate reproductive isolation of morphs, and (c) illuminate Holarctic phylogeography and lineages colonizing Lake Tinnsjøen. We compared Lake Tinnsjøen with four Norwegian outgroup populations. Four field‐assigned morphs were identified in Lake Tinnsjøen: the planktivore morph in all habitats except deep profundal, the dwarf morph in shallow‐moderate profundal, the piscivore morph mainly in shallow‐moderate profundal, and a new undescribed abyssal morph in the deep profundal. Morphs displayed extensive life‐history variation in age and size. A moderate‐to‐high concordance was observed among morphs and four genetic clusters from microsatellites. mtDNA suggested two minor endemic clades in Lake Tinnsjøen originating from one widespread colonizing clade in the Holarctic. All morphs were genetically differentiated at microsatellites (F ST: 0.12–0.20), associated with different mtDNA clade frequencies. Analyses of outgroup lakes implied colonization from a river below Lake Tinnsjøen. Our findings suggest postglacial adaptive radiation of one colonizing mtDNA lineage with niche specialization along a depth–temperature–productivity–pressure gradient. Concordance between reproductive isolation and habitats of morphs implies ecological speciation as a mechanism. Particularly novel is the extensive morph diversification with depth into the often unexplored deepwater profundal habitat, suggesting we may have systematically underestimated biodiversity in lakes. In a biological conservation framework, it is imperative to protect endemic below‐species‐level biodiversity, particularly so since within‐species variation comprises an extremely important component of the generally low total biodiversity observed in the northern freshwater systems.

Highlights

  • Revealing processes behind adaptive diversity, and formation of species, are central themes in evolutionary biology

  • We set up three main research topics with regard to the Lake Tinnsjøen Arctic charr diversity: (a) to document eco-morphology and life-history traits of field-assigned morphs, (b) to estimate reproductive isolation of field-assigned morphs or fish assessed using unbiased methods, and (c) to illuminate the phylogeography and ancestral lineages colonizing Lake Tinnsjøen

  • We revealed four Arctic charr morphs associated with four habitats in the pelagial (

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Revealing processes behind adaptive diversity, and formation of species, are central themes in evolutionary biology. There are often lake-specific differences in morph variance in, for example, niche occupation, phenotype, and life history (Knudsen, Amundsen, Primicerio, Klemetsen, & Sørensen, 2007;Moccetti et al, 2019) This large-scale parallel evolution in Holarctic lakes, with similar morphs appearing, is a unique feature when studying natural selection and early stages in the speciation continuum, making the Arctic charr species complex an excellent model system in evolutionary biology and ecoevo-devo studies. We set up three main research topics with regard to the Lake Tinnsjøen Arctic charr diversity: (a) to document eco-morphology and life-history traits (body shape, proportional catch in habitat, age, weight) of field-assigned morphs, (b) to estimate reproductive isolation of field-assigned morphs or fish assessed using unbiased methods (microsatellites), and (c) to illuminate the phylogeography and ancestral lineages colonizing Lake Tinnsjøen (mtDNA-CytB sequences) To accomplish these tasks, we collected fish in different habitats in the pelagial, littoral, shallow-moderate profundal and in the deep profundal. Using a putative ancestor below in the same drainage, we compared body shape to the Lake Tinnsjøen morphs

| METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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