Abstract

Understanding how a monophyletic lineage of a species diverges into several adaptive forms has received increased attention in recent years, but the underlying mechanisms in this process are still under debate. Postglacial fishes are excellent model organisms for exploring this process, especially the initial stages of ecological speciation, as postglacial lakes represent replicated discrete environments with variation in available niches. Here, we combine data of niche utilization, trophic morphology, and 17 microsatellite loci to investigate the diversification process of three sympatric European whitefish morphs from three northern Fennoscandian lakes. The morphological divergence in the gill raker number among the whitefish morphs was related to the utilization of different trophic niches and was associated with reproductive isolation within and across lakes. The intralacustrine comparison of whitefish morphs showed that these systems represent two levels of adaptive divergence: (1) a consistent littoral–pelagic resource axis; and (2) a more variable littoral–profundal resource axis. The results also indicate that the profundal whitefish morph has diverged repeatedly from the ancestral littoral whitefish morph in sympatry in two different watercourses. In contrast, all the analyses performed revealed clustering of the pelagic whitefish morphs across lakes suggesting parallel postglacial immigration with the littoral whitefish morph into each lake. Finally, the analyses strongly suggested that the trophic adaptive trait, number of gill rakers, was under diversifying selection in the different whitefish morphs. Together, the results support a complex evolutionary scenario where ecological speciation acts, but where both allopatric (colonization history) and sympatric (within watercourse divergence) processes are involved.

Highlights

  • Adaptive radiation, which is the evolutionary divergence of individuals from a single phylogenetic lineage into a variety of adaptive forms (Futuyma 1998), is a widespread phenomenon in several vertebrate taxa including fish, birds, and amphibians (Schluter 2000; Coyne and Orr 2004; Losos 2010)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • The large sparsely rakered (LSR) whitefish had higher d13C ratios compared with sparsely rakered (SSR) and densely rakered (DR) whitefish in all lakes

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Summary

Introduction

Adaptive radiation, which is the evolutionary divergence of individuals from a single phylogenetic lineage into a variety of adaptive forms (Futuyma 1998), is a widespread phenomenon in several vertebrate taxa including fish, birds, and amphibians (Schluter 2000; Coyne and Orr 2004; Losos 2010). Ecological Speciation in European Whitefish individual variation in panmictic populations without reproductive isolation, to population-wide phenotypic and genotypic polymorphisms with increasing level of reproductive isolation, which may lead to speciation (Hendry 2009). Such “speciation continua” appear to be especially common in northern polymorphic freshwater fish species (e.g., Skulason et al 1999; Taylor 1999; Schluter 2000; Bernatchez 2004; Klemetsen 2010)

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