Abstract

Because the body axes of fish consist of two anatomically distinct vertebrae, abdominal and caudal, one type may be more variable in number than the other and thus contribute more to morphological diversification. Jordan's rule, a geographical tendency for fish from higher latitudes to have more vertebrae, has not been examined in terms of numbers of abdominal and/or caudal vertebrae, despite its prevalence. Vertebral observations of wild populations of the medaka (Oryzias latipes) revealed that the latitudinal increase in vertebral number is caused by an increase in abdominal vertebrae; caudal vertebrae did not vary systematically across latitudes. Laboratory experiments revealed that this latitudinal cline in abdominal vertebral number persists in a range of common environments, demonstrating a genetic basis. Phenotypic plasticity was also evident: lower developmental temperatures resulted in more abdominal vertebrae. This indicates that greater numbers of abdominal vertebrae in higher latitude individuals in the wild may be caused not only by genetic factors but by lower habitat temperatures, although the contribution of the former to Jordan's rule is assessed to be much greater. The genetic basis of the latitudinal variation in abdominal vertebral number suggests that selection on functions associated with abdominal regions is the probable explanation for Jordan's rule in this fish.

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