Abstract

BackgroundPhylogenies provide critical information about convergence during adaptive radiation. To test whether there have been multiple origins of a distinctive trophic phenotype in one of the most rapidly radiating groups known, we used ultra-conserved elements (UCEs) to examine the evolutionary affinities of Lake Malawi cichlids lineages exhibiting greatly hypertrophied lips.ResultsThe hypertrophied lip cichlids Cheilochromis euchilus, Eclectochromis ornatus, Placidochromis “Mbenji fatlip”, and Placidochromis milomo are all nested within the non-mbuna clade of Malawi cichlids based on both concatenated sequence and single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) inferred phylogenies. Lichnochromis acuticeps that exhibits slightly hypertrophied lips also appears to have evolutionary affinities to this group. However, Chilotilapia rhoadesii that lacks hypertrophied lips was recovered as nested within the species Cheilochromis euchilus. Species tree reconstructions and analyses of introgression provided largely ambiguous patterns of Malawi cichlid evolution.ConclusionsContrary to mitochondrial DNA phylogenies, bifurcating trees based on our 1024 UCE loci supported close affinities of Lake Malawi lineages with hypertrophied lips. However, incomplete lineage sorting in Malawi tends to render these inferences more tenuous. Phylogenomic analyses will continue to provide powerful inferences about whether phenotypic novelties arose once or multiple times during adaptive radiation.

Highlights

  • Phylogenies provide critical information about convergence during adaptive radiation

  • We examined whether the Ultraconserved elements (UCE) derived sequences and single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) could provide insight into the relationships among the species with hypertrophied lips

  • Using sampling across geographically disparate sample sites in Lake Malawi for several congeneric species, we examined whether data from our UCE marker sets provided phylogenetic support for a number of taxonomically diagnosed clades using both concatenated analyses as well as species tree reconstructions that account for incomplete lineage sorting

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Summary

Introduction

Phylogenies provide critical information about convergence during adaptive radiation. Cichlids exhibiting greatly hypertrophied lips have independently arisen in the Nicaraguan crater lakes, large South American rivers, Lake Tanganyika, Lake Victoria, and Lake Malawi [10, 27,28,29,30,31,32,33]. This phenotype is often associated with feeding from rocky surfaces, and is likely

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