Abstract:
Cichlid  fishes  are  well  known  for  the
ir
spectacular  adaptive  radiations  in  the  Great  East 
African   lakes.   Yet,   a   number   of   reasons   including   their   size,   young   age   and   recent 
hybridizati
on  render  it  to  difficult 
to 
infer  the  evolutionary  history  of  these  huge  species 
assemblages. The Soda tilapia form a small radiation  (Genus 
Alcolapia
) that is endemic to an 
extreme  environment 
-
Lakes 
Magadi  and
Natron  in  Kenya  and  Tanzania.  It  provides 
an 
excellent  system  in  which  to  investigate  ecological  aspects  during  the  early  stages  of 
speciation.  We  used  an  integrated  approach  including  population  genomics  based  on  RAD
-
seq  data,  geometric  morphometrics,  and  stable  isotope  analyses  to  investigate  th
e  eco
-
morphological  diversification  of  Lake  Magadi  tilapia.  Based  on  coalescent  simulations  and 
joint  site  frequency  spectrum  analyses  we  reconstructed  their  demographic  history.  The 
population in the isolated satellite lake Little Magadi has a characteris
tically upturned mouth, 
an  adaptation  associated  with  feeding  on  prey  from  the  water  surface.  Ecomorphological 
differences  between  geographically  separated  populations  within  Lake  Magadi  are  more 
subtle, but coincide with ecological differences. All popula
tions diverged simultaneously only 
about  1
100  (95%  CI:  846
-
1632)  generations  ago.  Differences  in  the  amount  of  gene  flow 
between  populations  and  the  effective  population  sizes  have  likely  resulted  in  variable 
patterns of genome
-
wide differentiation that w
as inferred from RAD
-
seq data.