| Literature DB >> 24278349 |
Edward D Burress1, Alejandro Duarte, Wilson S Serra, Marcelo Loueiro, Michael M Gangloff, Lynn Siefferman.
Abstract
Ecological speciation is well-known from adaptive radiations in cichlidEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24278349 PMCID: PMC3836755 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0080929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Ecomorphological and dietary comparison of the Uruguay River Crenicichla species flock.
Live representatives of C. minuano (1), C. tendybaguassu (2), C. missioneira (3), and Crenicichla celidochilus (4) are laterally associated with their whole body warp transformation grids (a), summaries of their stomach contents (b), lower pharyngeal jaw warp transformation grids (c) and representative lower pharyngeal jaw (d).
Figure 2Morphological comparison of Uruguay River Crenicichla species flock.
Shape principal component analysis of the whole body (a) and lower pharyngeal jaw (b) of Crenicichla celidochilus (○), C. missioneira (□), C. tendybaguassu (◊), and C. minuano (△).
Figure 3Stable isotope ratios of the Uruguay River Crenicichla species flock.
Stable nitrogen and carbon isotope ratios (mean±SD) of Crenicichla celidochilus (○; CRCE), C. missioneira (□; CRMS), C. tendybaguassu (◊; CRTE), and C. minuano (△; CRMN).
Relative assimilation of functional prey types by Crenicichla as estimated by a dual-isotope Bayesian mixing model (IsotopeR).
| Consumer | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Functional prey group |
|
|
|
|
| Benthic fishes | <1 (0-1) | <1 (0-1) | -- | -- |
| Open-water fish | 68 (22-99) | 18 (1-37) | -- | -- |
| Benthic insects | 32 (0-98) | 82 (63-100) | 66 (39-78) | 99 (63-100) |
| Macrocrustacea | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Snails | -- | -- | 4 (0-18) | <1 (1-15) |
| Bivalves | -- | -- | 30 (21-43) | <1 (0-1) |
Values indicate the mean (95% CI) of possible mixtures that satisfied mass balance and are rounded to the nearest integer. Contributions that round to zero are denoted as <1.
Figure 4Evolutionary reconstruction of the Uruguay River Crenicichla species flock.
Maximum likelihood estimation of trophic guild (a) and ancestral jaw structure (b). Phylogenetic relationships are based on [15] pruned to include only species whose diets are known from the literature (see Table S2). Pie diagrams show character states and their proportions (i.e., likelihood) at each node. Maximum likelihood analyses find the ancestral states that maximize the probability that the observed character states (e.g., terminal nodes) would evolve under a stochastic model of evolution [49,50]. Images depict live representatives of each species. Red bar denotes the Uruguay River Crenicichla species flock.