Preliminary insight into the age and origin of the Labeobarbus fish species flock from Lake Tana (Ethiopia) using the mtDNA cytochrome b gene

M. de Graaf, H.J.W.C. Megens, J. Samallo, F.A. Sibbing

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

31 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The high diversity of Cyprinid fish in Ethiopia’s Lake Tana appears to be an example of ecological differentiation and assortative mating leading to rapid sympatric speciation. Lake Tana’s Labeobarbus species flock consists of 15 morphological and ecological distinct species. This is the first attempt to determine the age and origin and inter-species relationships of Lake Tana’s Labeobarbus species using the mtDNA cytochrome b gene. Analysis of cytchrome b sequences shows that Lake Tana’s species flock appears to be young but the present dataset did not unequivocally support monophyly of Lake Tana’s species. Additional markers are needed to determine whether Lake Tana’s labeobarbs originated from a single or multiple incursion(s) of ancestral L. intermedius in the Lake Tana drainage basin, or the disruption of an ancient continuous riverine population by the emergence of the Tissisat waterfalls. Adaptive radiation and speciation within Lake Tana’s Labeobarbus species flock may have occurred in the last 10,000–25,000 years, following the desiccation of Lake Tana around 17,000 years ago, at the same time as Lake Victoria, however, obtaining more data using other (nuclear) markers is urgently required
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)336-343
JournalMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
Volume54
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2010

Keywords

  • late pleistocene desiccation
  • barbus-intermedius complex
  • cichlid fishes
  • molecular phylogeny
  • reproductive segregation
  • ecological divergence
  • dna-sequences
  • east-africa
  • cyprinidae
  • speciation

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