2018
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.4651
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Dissecting a potential spandrel of adaptive radiation: Body depth and pectoral fin ecomorphology coevolve in Lake Malawi cichlid fishes

Abstract: The evolution of body shape reflects both the ecological factors structuring organismal diversity as well as an organism's underlying anatomy. For instance, body depth in fishes is thought to determine their susceptibility to predators, attractiveness to mates, as well as swimming performance. However, the internal anatomy influencing diversification of body depth has not been extensively examined, and changes in body depth could arise as a by‐product of functional changes in other anatomical structures. Using… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 107 publications
(164 reference statements)
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“…Our phylogenetic reconstructions highlighted that ecological convergence has occurred multiple times between the two major clades of Malawi cichlids (figure 2). As has been found previously [19,30,54,55], the primarily rock-dwelling mbuna formed a monophyletic clade. The species in the mbuna genera Genyochromis, Maylandia, Cyathochromis, Petrotilapia, Melanochromis, Tropheops and Labidochromis form a monophyletic clade with moderate support (85% bootstrap support) that is sister to the genus Labeotropheus.…”
Section: (A) Convergence In Dietsupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…Our phylogenetic reconstructions highlighted that ecological convergence has occurred multiple times between the two major clades of Malawi cichlids (figure 2). As has been found previously [19,30,54,55], the primarily rock-dwelling mbuna formed a monophyletic clade. The species in the mbuna genera Genyochromis, Maylandia, Cyathochromis, Petrotilapia, Melanochromis, Tropheops and Labidochromis form a monophyletic clade with moderate support (85% bootstrap support) that is sister to the genus Labeotropheus.…”
Section: (A) Convergence In Dietsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…We collected specimens for phylogenetic and morphological analyses from several locations in Lake Malawi. For phylogenetic analyses, we combined published ultra-conserved element (UCE) sequence data [19,29,54,55] with data produced for four additional species (GenBank BioProject: PRJNA344532). UCE sequence data were generated according to the protocols outlined in Hulsey et al ([40]; electronic supplementary material, Methods S1).…”
Section: Materials and Methods (A) Ultra-conserved Element Isolation Amentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Malawi (Cooper et al, 2010;Hulsey et al, 2018). Morphological variation in the atrium and ventricle also spans a spectrum from LF-like morphologies to TRC-like morphologies, and change along these axes mimic broad differences observed in other lineages, such as cavefish (Tang et al, 2018).…”
Section: Quantification Of Shape Variation In Hard and Soft Tissue mentioning
confidence: 87%
“…The major axes of divergence among our structures reflect characteristic changes that occur across lake Malawi cichlids (Albertson & Kocher, 2006;Cooper et al, 2010;Hulsey et al, 2018). Differences in mandible shape reflect a spectrum from wide, short, and robust jaws to thin, long and slender jaws, features that are linked to differences in diet and biomechanics (Albertson et al, 2003;.…”
Section: Morphological Variation Among Hybrids Mimics Variation Obsmentioning
confidence: 95%
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