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Research Article

Environmental change explains cichlid adaptive radiation at Lake Malawi over the past 1.2 million years

View ORCID ProfileSarah J. Ivory, Margaret W. Blome, John W. King, Michael M. McGlue, Julia E. Cole, and View ORCID ProfileAndrew S. Cohen
PNAS October 18, 2016 113 (42) 11895-11900; first published October 3, 2016; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1611028113
Sarah J. Ivory
aDepartment of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912;
bDepartment of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40506;
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  • ORCID record for Sarah J. Ivory
  • For correspondence: sarah_ivory@brown.edu
Margaret W. Blome
cBritish Petroleum, Houston, TX 77079;
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John W. King
dCoastal Institute, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI 02881;
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Michael M. McGlue
bDepartment of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40506;
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Julia E. Cole
eDepartment of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721
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Andrew S. Cohen
eDepartment of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721
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  1. Edited by John P. Smol, Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada, and accepted by Editorial Board Member David Jablonski August 12, 2016 (received for review July 6, 2016)

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  • Environmental context for cichlid evolution
    - Oct 06, 2016
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Significance

Tropical African lakes are well-known to house exceptionally biodiverse assemblages of fish and other aquatic fauna, which are thought to be at risk in the future. Although the modern assemblages are well-studied, direct evidence of the origin of this incredible wealth of species and the mechanisms that drive speciation are virtually unknown. We use a long sedimentary record from Lake Malawi to show that over the last 1.2 My both large-scale climatic and tectonic changes resulted in wet–dry transitions that led to extraordinary habitat variability and rapid diversification events. This work allows us to understand the environmental context of aquatic evolution in the most biodiverse tropical lake.

Abstract

Long paleoecological records are critical for understanding evolutionary responses to environmental forcing and unparalleled tools for elucidating the mechanisms that lead to the development of regions of high biodiversity. We use a 1.2-My record from Lake Malawi, a textbook example of biological diversification, to document how climate and tectonics have driven ecosystem and evolutionary dynamics. Before ∼800 ka, Lake Malawi was much shallower than today, with higher frequency but much lower amplitude water-level and oxygenation changes. Since ∼800 ka, the lake has experienced much larger environmental fluctuations, best explained by a punctuated, tectonically driven rise in its outlet location and level. Following the reorganization of the basin, a change in the pacing of hydroclimate variability associated with the Mid-Pleistocene Transition resulted in hydrologic change dominated by precession rather than the high-latitude teleconnections recorded elsewhere. During this time, extended, deep lake phases have abruptly alternated with times of extreme aridity and ecosystem variability. Repeated crossings of hydroclimatic thresholds within the lake system were critical for establishing the rhythm of diversification, hybridization, and extinction that dominate the modern system. The chronology of these changes closely matches both the timing and pattern of phylogenetic history inferred independently for the lake’s extraordinary array of cichlid fish species, suggesting a direct link between environmental and evolutionary dynamics.

  • tropical climate
  • cichlid evolution
  • adaptive radiation
  • paleoclimate
  • paleoecology

Footnotes

  • ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: sarah_ivory{at}brown.edu.
  • Author contributions: S.J.I., M.W.B., J.W.K., M.M.M., and A.S.C. designed research; S.J.I., M.W.B., J.W.K., M.M.M., and A.S.C. performed research; M.W.B., J.W.K., J.E.C., and A.S.C. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; S.J.I., M.W.B., J.W.K., M.M.M., J.E.C., and A.S.C. analyzed data; and S.J.I., M.W.B., J.W.K., M.M.M., J.E.C., and A.S.C. wrote the paper.

  • The authors declare no conflict of interest.

  • This article is a PNAS Direct Submission. J.P.S. is a Guest Editor invited by the Editorial Board.

  • Data deposition: Raw ostracod data are included in figure form in SI Appendix, and tabulated data have been archived at the National Center for Climate Data (https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/data-access/paleoclimatology-data/datasets); all core metadata are available at www.ngdc.noaa.gov/geosamples/showsample.jsp?imlgs=imlgs0195811.

  • See Commentary on page 11654.

  • This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1611028113/-/DCSupplemental.

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Environmental change explains adaptive radiation
Sarah J. Ivory, Margaret W. Blome, John W. King, Michael M. McGlue, Julia E. Cole, Andrew S. Cohen
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Oct 2016, 113 (42) 11895-11900; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1611028113

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Environmental change explains adaptive radiation
Sarah J. Ivory, Margaret W. Blome, John W. King, Michael M. McGlue, Julia E. Cole, Andrew S. Cohen
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Oct 2016, 113 (42) 11895-11900; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1611028113
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