“…These studies suggested mitochondrial introgression, sometimes on a small scale between presently allopatric populations, sometimes on a large-scale producing true hybrid populations, at various time points in the evolutionary history of the genus Tropheus. Most of these events of population displacement were triggered by lake level fluctuations, which extended to a few hundred meters below present level (Lezzar et al, 1996;Cohen et al, 1997;Scholz et al, 2003;McGlue et al, 2008). While the effect is widely seen in population genetic studies on various Lake Tanganyika cichlid species (Verheyen et al, 1996;Rüber et al, 1999Rüber et al, , 2001Duftner et al, 2006;Koblmüller et al, 2007Koblmüller et al, , 2009Koblmüller et al, , 2011Sefc et al, 2007;Nevado et al, 2013;Van Steenberge et al, 2015), studies specifically testing for the impact of Pleistocene water level fluctuations are scarce (Koblmüller et al, 2011;Winkelmann et al, 2016).…”