Department of Biology, University of Konstanz, Germany
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Abstract |
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Introduction |
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The geographic centers of the astonishing diversity of cichlid fish are the east African rift lakes (reviewed in Fryer and Iles 1972
; Meyer 1993
; Stiassny and Meyer 1999
). In Lakes Victoria, Malawi, and Tanganyika, the morphological diversification and speciation of some cichlid lineages occurred extremely rapidly, and many new species arose within only a few thousand generations, explosively forming adaptive radiations of several hundred species that are endemic to each of these three lakes (Sage et al. 1984
; Meyer et al. 1990
; Owen et al. 1990
; Meyer, Montero, and Spreinat 1994
; Johnson et al. 1996
; Meyer, Montero, and Spreinat 1996
). Recent molecular phylogenetic studies have established that these adaptive radiations are derived from only a single or a few founder lineages (Meyer et al. 1990
; Meyer, Kocher, and Wilson 1991
; Kocher et al. 1993
; Meyer 1993
; Albertson et al. 1999
). Interestingly, the large east African cichlid species flocks are almost, without exception, composed of only a subgroup of cichlids, the haplochromine cichlids, those that belong to the so-called H-lineage of Nishida (1991)
. The Tanganyikan cichlid species flock is the most complex assemblage of cichlids with respect to morphology, ecology, and behavior in the world (e.g., Greenwood 1984
; Brichard 1989
). The cichlid fauna of Lake Tanganyika is believed to be of polyphyletic origin, with affinities to other African regions (Fryer and Iles 1972
; Nishida 1991
) and is considered as an evolutionary reservoir of ancient African cichlid lineages (Nishida 1991
). It comprises about 200 cichlid fish species that are assigned to 12 tribes. Eight of these tribes, the Bathybatini, Cyprichromini, Ectodini, Eretmodini, Limnochromini, Perissodini, Trematocarini, and Tropheini, are endemic (Poll 1986
; Nishida 1991
; Sturmbauer and Meyer 1993
). Some haplochromine cichlids of Lake Tanganyika (Tropheini, Haplochromini) are the sister group to the species flocks of Lakes Malawi and Victoria (Meyer et al. 1990
; Nishida 1991
; Sturmbauer and Meyer 1993
). In contrast to the species flocks of Lake Malawi and Lake Victoria, which exclusively consist of mouthbrooding cichlids (Barlow 1991
; Keenleyside 1991
), the cichlid fauna of Lake Tanganyika comprises both mouthbrooding and substrate-brooding lineages.
The other major group of African cichlids, the tilapiine cichlids, have also repeatedly formed smaller species flocks of typically less than 10 species, for example, in some crater lakes in Cameroon, but they have not speciated to any noticeable degree like the cichlids of their putative sister group, the haplochromine cichlids (Trevawas 1972, reviewed in Stiassny, Schliewen, and Dominey 1992
; Schliewen, Tautz, and Pääbo 1994
).
In contrast to the highly specialized species of the famous haplochromine cichlid species flocks of Lakes Malawi and Victoria, the tilapiines have a more general body plan and are often river inhabitants, whereas most haplochromines live in lakes. Evolutionary biologists dealing with the relationships of cichlids have often assumed a basal position of the tilapiines within the African clade because of their generalized morphology and ecological diversity (e.g., Stiassny 1991
). Because of this less specialized morphology, tilapiines are highly adaptable to diverse ecological habitats and are presumably less prone to extinction. This is perhaps one reason why these presumed generalist species have persisted to this day, although they are confined to the rivers and have been largely unable to colonize lakes that are occupied by the more specialized haplochromine cichlids.
Teleost fish show a wide array of different parental care behaviors where one or both parents defend and care for the eggs or the young after hatching. Gittleman (1981)
suggested that in fishes the evolutionary transitions in the sex of the caregiver occurred in discrete pathways: from no care to male-only, to biparental, to female-only, to no care. Evolutionary changes requiring that both sexes change at once (e.g., from no care to care) are not expected to occur because two adaptive mutations are not likely to arise simultaneously (Lewontin 1974
, reviewed in Gittleman 1981
). Gittleman's hypothesis (1981)
was supported by a cost-benefit analysis of Gross and Sargent (1985)
of externally fertilizing fishes. In this study one benefit, the "increased survivorship of young," and three costs, a "mating cost," an "adult survivorship cost," and a "future fertility cost," were taken into account. Goodwin, Balshine-Earn, and Reynolds (1998)
recently carried out a comparative method approach of the family Cichlidae. Cichlids offer a great opportunity for comparative studies of the evolution of behavioral patterns, such as mating systems and parental care patterns, because in this family there is more behavioral diversity than in any other family of fishes (Gross and Sargent 1985
), and even closely related species exhibit a wide range of behavioral strategies (e.g., Brichard 1989
).
Previous research on cichlids has included all aspects of their biology, including behavior, ecology, and evolutionary biology (reviews in Keenleyside 1991
). The recently increased knowledge of their phylogenetic relationships (e.g., Oliver 1984
; Stiassny 1991
; Kocher et al. 1993
; Meyer 1993
; Zardoya et al. 1996
; Kullander 1998
; Streelman et al. 1998
; Farias et al. 1999
) permitted the study of the evolution of their diverse ecology and varied mating and parental care behaviors (e.g., Goodwin, Balshine-Earn, and Reynolds 1998
).
Until recently, the investigation of phylogenetic relationships among cichlids was restricted to morphological characters (Stiassny 1991
; Kullander 1998
). However, although cichlids are a morphologically extremely diverse group, there are only few morphological characters which can be used in a cladistic approach to investigate the intrafamilial relationships (Stiassny 1991
). One large and evolutionarily important group of cichlids that has been characterized solely by morphological features so far is the tilapiines (Seegers, Sonnenberg, and Yamamoto 1999
). The members of this group are found throughout Africa, in the eastern Mediterranean region, in Israel, and in Iran (Trevawas 1983
).
The significance of the tilapiines for human religion and consumption predates their modern scientific investigation, e.g., Oreochromis niloticus, a geographically widespread tilapiine cichlid, was already known to the early Egyptian cultures and played a significant role in their lives, as indicated by their frequent occurrence in ancient Egyptian art (Fryer and Iles 1972
). The tilapiine cichlids continue to have great economic importance because some of them are an important source of protein in human diets, particularly in Africa, and increasingly, through aquaculture, worldwide (Pullin and Lowe-McConnell 1982
; Trewavas 1982b
). Widespread exploitation and aquaculture of tilapias has lead to their introduction in all tropical regions around the globe, often adversely impacting the natural ichthyofauna.
Regan's (1920)
important systematic subdivision of the family Cichlidae into two main groupslater known as the tilapiine and the haplochromine cichlidswas based on morphological differences of the neurocranial apophysis for articulation of the upper pharyngeal bones. According to Regan (1920)
, the Tilapia-type apophysis consists exclusively of the parasphenoid bone, and the Haplochromis-type apophysis includes also a portion of the basioccipital bone. One Neotropical genus, Cichla, was noted to have a Haplochromis-type apophysis, whereas the remaining American cichlids were observed to have a Tilapia-type apophysis (Regan 1920
).
The phylogenetic reliability of this morphological criterion and the resulting subdivision of cichlid fishes have been repeatedly challenged during the last 80 years (Regan 1920
, 1922
; Greenwood 1978
; Stiassny 1991
; Kullander 1998
) (table 1
). Even the African cichlid monophyly and the Neotropical cichlid monophyly are questioned by some modern workers (Stiassny 1991
; Kullander 1998
), although the reciprocal monophyly of the hundreds of species of the Neotropical and African cichlids is supported by large-scale molecular phylogenetic studies (Zardoya et al. 1996
; Streelman et al. 1998
; Farias et al. 1999
, 2000
, 2001
).
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Wickler's (1963)
comparison of the behavioral and secondary sexual characteristics of the African members of the different African groups also disagreed with Regan's original dichotomy. Although it is clear that a simple tilapiine-haplochromine dichotomy of the African cichlids is no longer acceptable (Stiassny 1991
), there are no alternative morphological characters known to diagnose the postulated major evolutionary lineages of the African cichlids. Trewavas (1983)
insisted on the Tilapia-type apophysis as a conclusive criterion, but Greenwood (1986)
questioned the reliability of this particular character.
Stiassny (1991)
diagnosed the tilapiines by two synapomorphies, namely, two prominent foramina at the back of the lower pharyngeal jaw and a median ridge on the dorsal aspect of the keel of the lower pharyngeal jaw. Stiassny's (1991)
morphological diagnosis resulted in an elimination of Pelmatochromis, Steatocranus, and Pterochromis, which were included in the tilapiines by Trewavas (1983)
(table 1
). Tilapiines, by Stiassny's definition, are a more reduced grouping compared with the taxonomic entity characterized by Tilapia-type apophysis by Regan (1920)
and corresponds well with the traditional view of the genus Tilapia. Tilapia was split by Trewavas into several genera, including Tilapia, Oreochromis, and Sarotherodon (Trewavas 1983
and references therein).
Tilapias exhibit a wide spectrum of ecological adaptations and tolerances (pH, temperature, salinity), but in spite of their astonishing ecological diversity and adaptability, which permitted some species of Oreochromis to colonize some highly saline environments in East Africa and even some coral reefs of the Hawaiian islands, their morphological diversity remained somewhat muted. This morphological relative "sameness," compared with the legendary variation in haplochromine cichlids, complicates the estimation of their phylogenetic relationships (McAndrew and Majumdar 1984
). Tilapias are of special interest for ethologists and evolutionary biologists because they show a great diversity of parental care behavior. Some species are substrate-brooders, i.e., they take care of eggs and larvae in a crevice or nest, whereas others are mouthbrooders and incubate their eggs in their buccal cavities and call their young back into their mouths for protection. All mouthbrooding Tilapias are ovophile mouthbrooders, i.e., they take up their young into their buccal cavity already before hatching, except the "New Cross cichlid"a heretofore undescribed species, which has been observed to be a larvophile mouthbrooding (J. Freyhof, personal communication).
In addition to the diversity of the form of parental care, the sex of the caregiver also varies in this group, which includes all possible modes of parental care that are found in the entire family Cichlidae: uniparental maternal, uniparental paternal, and biparental-brooding species. Among mouthbrooding cichlids, uniparental female care is most common (Fryer and Iles 1972
). Substrate spawning by both parents is widely considered to be the ancestral state in cichlids (Lowe-McConnell 1959
), and it is thought that mouthbrooding evolved several times independently in the family (Goodwin, Balshine-Earn, and Reynolds 1998
).
Two models have been proposed for the evolution of mouthbrooding in Tilapias. Trewavas (1980)
originally proposed that mouthbrooding in Tilapias evolved only once from a single substrate-brooding Tilapia-like ancestor. The mouthbrooding branch itself subsequently divided into two: a branch of maternal mouthbrooders and another of biparental and paternal mouthbrooders (fig. 1A
). Later, Trewavas (1983)
revised her hypothesis to suggest that there could have been an independent evolution of biparental and paternal mouthbrooding on the one hand and maternal mouthbrooding on the other hand from close relatives. On the basis of parental care behavior and also morphologic, meristic, and biogeographic traits, Trewavas (1980
, 1982a,
1982b,
1983
) subdivided the Tilapias into three different genera or subgenera, respectively. She suggested that the substrate-spawning Tilapias should retain the name Tilapia, the biparental and paternal mouthbrooders should be grouped as Sarotherodon, and the maternal mouthbrooders as Oreochromis. Although Sarotherodon caudomarginatus is a maternal mouthbrooder (Stiassny 1996
), this fact was unknown to Trewavas (1983)
, who classified this species into the genus Sarotherodon on the basis of its biogeographic distribution.
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On the basis of the partial tilapiine phylogenies of Sodsuk (1993)
and Schliewen, Tautz, and Pääbo (1994)
, a family wide reconstruction of the transitions in parental care behavior (Goodwin, Balshine-Earn, and Reynolds 1998
) suggested that mouthbrooding evolved in this group only once, supporting Trewavas' hypothesis, but was then lost at least twice. Alternatively, it evolved within the tilapiine and Tanganyikan cichlid fishes at least three times independently.
We determined the DNA sequences of the mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2 (ND2) genes from a representative collection of all African cichlids to further examine behavioral (i.e., parental care) and morphological (apophysis and lower pharyngeal jaw) hypotheses concerning the evolution of the tilapiine cichlids. This gene was previously analyzed by Kocher et al. (1995)
in an effort to elucidate taxonomic relationships among the east African cichlids of Lakes Malawi and Tanganyika. For reconstructing the history of parental care evolution in cichlids, we assembled the most complete composite phylogeny of any molecular and morphological studies.
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Materials and Methods |
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Amplifications were carried out in 25-µl reaction volumes in a Perkin-Elmer GeneAmp® PCR System 9700 (PE Applied Biosystems) using Taq DNA polymerase (0.125 µl = 25 U/ml, Pharmacia). The PCR protocol was 92°C for 1 min, 47 to 55°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 2 min, for 35 cycles. The amplification product was purified with the QIAquick PCR Purification Kit (QIAGEN) and resuspended in 30 µl ddH2O. One to seven microliters (3090 ng) was used as a template in a BigDye Terminator Ready Reaction Mix (Perkin-Elmer) and 1 µl of primer (10 µM) in 10-µl reactions with the PCR protocol: 96°C for 10 s, 50°C for 5 s, and 60°C for 4 min, for 25 to 30 cycles. The cycle sequencing product was purified with an ethanolammonium acetate precipitation (3 M NaOAc, pH 4.6), the samples were dried and resuspended in 4 to 6 µl of a 5:1 deionized formamide:blue dextran/EDTA (pH 8.0) solution, denatured at 90°C for 2 min, and loaded into 4% acrylamide gels. Gels were run on an ABI PRISMTM377HT DNA Sequencer (PE Applied Biosystems).
Analyses of the ND2 Gene
To assess the degree of saturation of the transition and transversion mutations in each codon position, the number of substitutions (Y-axis) was plotted against Kimura-2-parameter distances (X-axis) of 1,680 pairwise comparisons of ND2 (fig. 2
).
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Reconstruction of Parental Care Behavior in the Family Cichlidae
In order to elucidate the evolution of parental care behavior in the family Cichlidae, we assembled a composite phylogenetic tree based on diverse molecular and morphological data. According to morphological (Stiassny 1991
) and molecular (Zardoya et al. 1996
; Farias et al. 1999
; Farias, Orti, and Meyer 2000
) studies, the Madagascan and Indian cichlids have been positioned basal to the monophyletic African and Neotropical cichlids. Phylogenetic relationships among Neotropical cichlids were recently determined by Farias et al. (1999)
on the basis of the 16S rRNA sequences and in a morphological study by Kullander (1998)
.
The west African genera were positioned according to our own results and studies by Greenwood (1985)
, Stiassny (1991)
, and van der Bank (1994)
. According to Meyer et al. (1990)
the Tanganyikan cichlids were positioned in an ancestral position to the monophyletic species flocks of Lake Victoria and Lake Malawi. Phylogenies of the monophyletic tribes Ectodini and Lamprologini have been adopted from Sturmbauer and Meyer (1993)
and Sturmbauer, Verheyen, and Meyer (1994)
, respectively.
The tilapiine genera Myaka, Pungu, and Konia have been inserted at positions suggested by previous studies of Sodsuk (1993)
and Schliewen, Tautz, and Pääbo (1994)
. Representatives of the genera Iranocichla, Oreochromis, Tilapia, Sarotherodon (except the crater lake species of Barombi-Mbo), Stomatepia, and Tristramella were placed according to the results from our MP analysis.
The evolution of parental care behavior (form of care and sex of caregiver) in the family Cichlidae was examined by mapping those states onto this composite phylogeny using MacClade Version 3.06 (Maddison and Maddison 1992).
Reproductive Data
In the reconstruction of parental care behavior we considered the form of care (substrate-brooding and mouthbrooding) and the sex of the caregiver (biparental, female-only, and male-only). Delayed and immediate mouthbroodings have not been distinguished. As "biparental," we defined those species where both the male and the female perform behavior which is likely to increase the chances of survival of the offspring (see also Keenleyside 1991
). The assigned reproductive data are based on the results from Trewavas (1983)
, Koslowski (1985)
, Loiselle (1985)
, Staeck and Linke (1985)
, Linke and Staeck (1987)
, Richter (1989)
, Keenleyside (1991)
, Stiassny (1996)
, Kawanabe, Hori, and Nagoshi (1997)
, Kuwamura (1997)
, Stawikowski and Werner (1998)
, J. Freyhof (personal communication), and M. Stiassny (personal communication).
Analysis of Character Evolution
The composite phylogeny was assembled in MacClade 3.06 (Maddison and Maddison 1992). Multiple nodes were treated as unresolved "soft polytomies" rather than as multiple speciation events. Unordered character states were used, allowing any character state (form of care or sex of caregiver) to transform into any other using the Fitch parsimony option (Maddison and Maddison 1992). Where the reproductive behavior is unknown (shown by a lack of a box next to the taxon name), the program assigns the most parsimonious reproductive character to the branch. The numbers of transitions in character states was determined by hand because the trees included some equivocal branches. Typically, we report the transitions in a rangethe minimum number shows the transitions that have been verified unambiguously in the trees, the maximum number shows all the possible changes.
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Results |
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All tree-generating methods result in similar topologies with respect to the relationships of tilapiine cichlids in the trees (figs. 35 ). The phylogram generated by the NJ analysis (fig. 5 ) reveals some long branches for the West African species Chromidotilapia guentheri and Pelvicachromis pulcher and also for the Tanganyikan species Trematocara unimaculatum, which might potentially result in a "pulling" of these species to more basal positions. Despite the long branches, their phylogenetic positions seem to be reasonable with respect to the biogeographic data.
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The ND2 data included in this study do not permit to unambiguously resolve the relationships among the tilapiine cichlids of the Sarotherodon group (i.e., genera Sarotherodon, Iranocichla, Tristramella, and Stomatepia), Oreochromis, Boulengerochromis, Tilapia sparrmanii, and the D-Tilapia-group and among the Lake Tanganyika tribes (Tropheini, Limnochromini, Perissodini, Ectodini, Bathybatini, Trematocarini, and Eretmodini) and further representatives of the Lake Tanganyika radiation (Lamprologus congoensis [Lamprologini], Astatotilapia burtoni [Haplochromini], Cyclopharynx fwae [Haplochromini]). The Lake Tanganyika radiation appears to be monophyletic with respect to the tilapiine lineages, except for Boulengerochromis, whose position at the base of the Lake Tanganyika endemic cichlids remains somewhat uncertain. Because there is a good resolution of both the basal and the very recent species relationships, the poor resolution in the trees after the branching-off of Steatocranus is likely to reflect a true biological phenomenonthe rapid origin of many cichlid lineages in east Africa within a short time span during that part of the evolutionary history of cichlid fishes (figs. 35 ).
The Evolution of Parental Care in Cichlids
On the basis of the imposed composite phylogeny, the most parsimonious reconstruction of reproductive characters evolution reveals 13 evolutionary steps and indicates that mouthbrooding evolved from substrate-brooding 9 to 18 times with seven transitions in the Neotropical cichlids and 2 to 11 transitions to mouthbrooding in the African cichlids (fig. 6
). Transitions in the reverse direction have been inferred in 1the evolution of the substrate-brooding Lamprologini from the mouthbrooding ancestors of the Lake Tanganyikan species flock (Sturmbauer and Meyer 1993
; Stiassny and Meyer 1999
)to 2 cases in the African clade.
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Discussion |
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Tilapia is Not a Monophyletic Group
Our study is the first to show that the tilapiine assemblage of the African cichlids (i.e., Boulengerochromis, Iranocichla, Oreochromis, Pelvicachromis, Sarotherodon, Steatocranus, Stomatepia, Tilapia, and Tristramella) is clearly not monophyletic. Likewise, the genus Tilapia, as currently defined, is also polyphyletic (figs. 35
). We rather find evidence that some tilapiine species (e.g., T. cabrae, T. mariae, T. sparrmanii, genera Oreochromis, Sarotherodon, Stomatepia, Tristramella, and Iranocichla) are more closely related to genera and tribes that are traditionally considered to be nontilapiines (e.g., Tropheini, Lamprologini, and Perissodini) than to representatives of their own assemblage (representatives of the A- and B-Tilapia-groups), as previously defined by both Trewavas (1983)
and Stiassny (1991)
(table 1 ). That the genus Tilapia is probably not a phylogenetically cohesive group was already suggested by Stiassny, Schliewen, and Dominey (1992)
. In our study this genus is divided into at least five different groups, with three of them in basal positions in the phylogeny of the African cichlids (figs. 35
). The presumably most basal Tilapia group (the A group), on the basis of the MP and NJ analyses, comprises the species T. brevimanus, T. busumana, and T. discolor, which are distributed in Ghana and Ivory Coast. The ND2 sequences of these species also differ diagnostically from all other Tilapia species by having a TAG instead of a TAA as the stop codon. Because of its V-shaped lower pharyngeal jaw, T. busumana has been thought to be a basal tilapiine (Greenwood 1987
), and this presumed ancestral position of T. busumana as one of the most basal African lineages is confirmed in this molecular analysis.
The B-Tilapia-group includes T. coffea, T. guineensis, T. louka, T. rendalli, T. walteri, T. zillii, T. buettikoferi, and T. cessiana. It is interesting to note that the latter two species appear as sister species in our tree and are representatives of the subgenus Heterotilapia (Thys van den Audenaerde 1970
). The other species of the B-Tilapia-group have been assigned to the subgenus Coptodon (Thys van den Audenaerde 1970
), which on the basis of our data would appear to be paraphyletic.
The C-Tilapia-group is made up of a single, possibly biparental, mouthbrooding species New Cross cichlid from the Congo River. This species will be formally described shortly by U. Schliewen and M. Stiassny (personal communication).
Because the sister group relationship of T. mariae and T. cabrae is well supported in the ML, MP, as well as NJ phylogenetic analyses (figs. 35
), we designated them as the D-Tilapia-group. Interestingly, the type species of the genus Tilapia T. sparrmanii Smith (1840) (Jordan 1963
) is clustered in all tree topologies, albeit with a low bootstrap support, with B. microlepis. Because there is no well-supported monophyletic grouping with the other species, we suggest that T. sparrmanii is the only representative of the genus Tilapia in the present study. Thus, on the basis of these findings, only the type species is labeled with the genus name Tilapia in the boxes in our figures and might well be the only species that should remain taxonomically assigned to this genus. It is noteworthy that T. sparrmanii and T. cabrae exhibit a much more southern distribution in Africa than any other Tilapia species, which are predominately distributed throughout west Africa. Although T. mariae is found chiefly in west Africa, the southern range of its habitat (southern Cameroon) is contiguous with that of T. cabrae.
Although one of the two major groups identified in a previous allozyme study (Pouyaud and Agnèse 1995
) is composed of the same species as our B-Tilapia-group, the other group of this previous study is composed of species from three Tilapia groups as defined by us (A-, B-, and D-Tilapia-groups). This difference appears to be a consequence of the difference in the resolution power of the two marker systems (allozymes vs. mitochondrial DNA sequences) because many samples from these two studies are identical.
Tilapia sparrmanii seem to be more closely related to the mouthbrooding species of the colloquially named Tilapias (Oreochromis and the Sarotherodon group comprising the genera Sarotherodon, Stomatepia, Tristramella, and Iranocichla) and to several diverse nontilapiine genera of Lake Tanganyika than to other representatives of its own genus that are found in the distantly related A-, B-, and C-Tilapia-groups (figs. 35 ).
Despite the saturation of the transition mutations in the third codon positions (fig. 2
) which is mainly caused by synonymous substitutions in the fourfold degenerate codon positions, the relationships among the basal groups are well resolved. Hence, the sometimes short branches and, therefore, the often weak bootstrap support for relationships among members of the D-Tilapia-group, T. sparrmanii, the genera Sarotherodon, Oreochromis, and Boulengerochromis, and the Tanganyikan cichlids may reflect a rapid origin of these lineages early on in the history of diversification of the Lake Tanganyika cichlid species flock (Sturmbauer 1998
). This period of rapid speciation would hence explain the limited resolving power of the phylogenetic relationships with any genetic marker.
What, if Anything, is a TilapiaSystematics and Nomenclature of Tilapiine Cichlids
According to the nomenclature conventions, only species which form a natural (monophyletic) group with an explicitly designated type species share the genus name with this species. Because there is no proof of a monophyletic relationship of the type species of the genus Tilapia, T. sparrmanii Smith (1840) (Jordan 1963
), with any other so-called Tilapia species, we will hereafter refer only to this species using the genus name Tilapia as the only "true Tilapia species." We suggest that the representatives of the other four Tilapia groups (A-, B-, C-, and D-Tilapia-groups) should be renamed and be given new genera names that connote their strongly supported monophyly in the tree of the African cichlids. The continued use of the genus name Tilapia for all five diverse, and only relatively distantly related, groups of the tilapia-like African cichlids would falsely imply close or even monophyletic relationships that are clearly rejected by this study. However, because there are no rules for informal names, a continued use of the term "tilapiine" for tilapia-like fishes seems likely.
Our finding that the only true Tilapia species T. sparrmanii of our study is more closely related to some nontilapiinesthe cichlids of Lake Tanganyikathan to other presumed Tilapia species (e.g., A- and B-Tilapia-group) affects the phylogenetic integrity of the traditional morphology-based tilapiine phylogenetic hypotheses presented by Regan (1920
, 1922
), Trewavas (1983)
, and Stiassny (1991)
. Morphology-based criteria proved to be insufficient to describe a monophyletic tilapiine group. The apophysis criterion used by Regan (1920
, 1922
) and Trewavas (1983)
and perhaps also the two features of the lower pharyngeal jaw applied by Stiassny (1991)
seem to be plesiomorphic characteristics of ancient cichlid fishes, which have been retained in different groups (e.g., D-Tilapia-group, Sarotherodon, Oreochromis, and Tristramella) and lost repeatedly in others (e.g., Haplochromini, Lamprologini, and Eretmodini). Hence, these morphological traits are homoplasious and, therefore, probably of limited phylogenetic value.
Boulengerochromis
The monotypic genus Boulengerochromis, which is the largest of all cichlid species, and endemic to Lake Tanganyika, has been classified by Greenwood (1978)
as a tilapiine fish because of the morphology of its apophysis. This phylogenetic placement is quite remarkable because this genus has a clearly distinct ecology from all the other tilapiines; it is the largest species of all cichlids, reaching almost 90 cm in length. Whereas the tilapiines are typically slow swimming, primarily herbivorous fish, Boulengerochromis is a fast swimming piscivore. The designation of Boulengerochromis as tilapiine has been challenged repeatedly before because no species with intermediate habits and morphology are known (Fryer and Iles 1972
). Although lepidological investigations (Lippitsch 1998
), allozyme analyses (Nishida 1991
, 1997
), and ND2 sequence data (Kocher et al. 1995
) all contradict the classification of Greenwood (1978)
and Poll (1986)
, these studies were based only on a limited subset of tilapiines. In the present study B. microlepis typically groups closely with T. sparrmanii (figs. 35
). Additionally, this species is found to group with the mouthbrooding tilapiines of the genus Oreochromis and the Sarotherodon group in ML analyses, albeit with only a low bootstrap support (fig. 3
). This placement of Boulengerochromis would tend to support Greenwood's (1978)
and Poll's (1986)
classification of this species as a true tilapiine cichlid. In contrast, in NJ and MP, Boulengerochromis is found either to group within the Tanganyikan cichlids (NJ, fig. 5
) or group basal to the mouthbrooding tilapiines of the genus Oreochromis and the Sarotherodon group (MP, fig. 4
), respectively. Hence, we are currently unable to ascertain the phylogenetic position of this enigmatic fish.
Steatocranus, Stomatepia, Tristramella, and Iranocichla
The phylogenetic relationship of the riverine Congo genus Steatocranus to the tilapiines is controversial. Although Trewavas (1983)
proposed that this genus is, according to its apophysial structure, a tilapiine fish, this classification is contradicted by Stiassny's (1991)
pharyngeal jaw criterion. In the MP and NJ analyses, Steatocranus branches off from the remaining African cichlids after the B- (MP, fig. 4
) or C- Tilapia-group (NJ, fig. 5
), respectively, and appears to be a sister taxon to an assemblage of T. sparrmanii, the D-Tilapia-group, Oreochromis, the Sarotherodon group, and the Tanganyikan lineages (except Tylochromis). Because the bootstrap support for all three topologies is rather weak, the relationship of this genus to the tilapiine cichlids of the genera Iranocichla, Oreochromis, Sarotherodon, Stomatepia, and Tristramella remains uncertain.
Because the genera Iranocichla, Stomatepia, and Tristramella are found to group within the genus Sarotherodon, we used the informal name Sarotherodon group for this assemblage (figs. 35 ). A close phylogenetic relationship between Sarotherodon and Tristramella has already been suggested in several previous studies (Trewavas 1942
; Steinitz and Ben-Tuvia 1960
, reviewed in Peters and Berns 1982
). Because of the well-supported close relationship of S. galilaeus with S. mariae, and S. occidentalis with Tristramella simonis, we conclude that the genus Sarotherodon is not monophyletic. Whether the genera Tristramella, Stomatepia, and Iranocichla should be assigned to this genus will require additional study. The informal usage of the name Sarotherodon group should, therefore, at this stage not imply monophyly.
Evolution of Parental Care Behavior in the Family Cichlidae
We reconstructed the evolution of parental care behavior by mapping these traits on a composite phylogeny of the family Cichlidae. Our composite tree comprises recent phylogenies of the Neotropical cichlids (Kullander 1998
; Farias et al. 1999
, 2001
; Farias, Orti, and Meyer 2000
) and, on the basis of our new findings of the ND2 data set, the relationships of the so-called tilapiines and their position in the African clade (figs. 6
and 7
).
Substrate spawning by both parents is widely considered to be the ancestral state in cichlids (Lowe-McConnell 1959
). A family wide reconstruction of the evolutionary changes in parental care behavior of cichlid fishes, carried out by Goodwin, Balshine-Earn, and Reynolds (1998)
, suggests that mouthbrooding has evolved from substrate guarding 10 to 14 times, zero to three reversals are inferred to have occurred, and transitions to mouthbrooding happened four to seven times in the African cichlid fishes and six to seven times in the Neotropical cichlid fishes. On the basis of our analysis, there is evidence that mouthbrooding evolved 2 to 11 times in the African clade and seven times in the Neotropical clade and that evolution in the reverse direction occurred in 1 to 10 occasions (fig. 6
).
In agreement with the analysis of Goodwin, Balshine-Earn, and Reynolds (1998)
, we found that the sex of the caregiver has been more evolutionarily labile than the form of parental care. Minimally 16 (11 in African + 5 in Neotropical) and maximally 23 (17 in African + 6 in Neotropical) to female-only care transitions can be inferred from our reconstruction (fig. 7
). We reconstructed only two transition to male-only care and 4 to 14 reversals back to biparental care compared with a total of 9 to 18 transitions from substrate spawning to mouthbrooding with only 1 to 10 reversals back to substrate spawning (figs. 6
and 7
).
The reasons for the low number of transitions in the form of care compared with the sex of caregiver are probably related to the fact that this behavior is more dependent on the evolution of the complex morphological and physiological structures. For successful mouthbrooding, there is a need for a wide buccal cavity, high gill-raker numbers to prevent a loss of the eggs, and often the ability of the caregiver to fast during brooding (Fryer and Iles 1972
; Keenleyside 1991
). On the other hand, egg attachment systems and larval headglands are essential to facilitate substrate-brooding. Substrate- and mouthbrooders also differ in the size of their eggs and their clutch size (Peters and Berns 1982
) and in the duration of the developmental intervals during early ontogeny (Noakes and Balon 1982
). Whereas substrate-brooders lay a lot of small eggs, mouthbrooders have only a few but big and yolky eggs. The evolution from one form of care to the other is, therefore, presumed to be a relatively slow process that involves evolutionary changes of several morphological and physiological systems. Transitions in the sex of the caregiver are less constrained and mostly influenced by ecological factors, like predation pressure, food abundance (Townshend and Wootton 1985
), and the operational sex ratio (Balshine-Earn 1996
). For example, high predation risk to the offspring would favor biparental care of the free-swimming fry, and a high probability of remating opportunities for the male because of a female-biased sex ratio would result in the desertion of the male. Goodwin, Balshine-Earn, and Reynolds (1998)
found in their study of evolutionary transitions in parental care behavior that mouthbrooding evolved in tilapiine fish only once, supporting Trewavas' hypothesis, and that within a monophyletic cluster of different mouthbrooding tilapiine genera female-only care evolved four times and male-only care only once. According to their topology of cichlid relationships, Goodwin, Balshine-Earn, and Reynolds (1998)
presumed that uniparental mouthbrooders evolved from biparental substrate-brooders and mouthbrooders, as hypothesized by Iles and Holden (1969)
, and female-only and biparental mouthbrooding evolved independently from biparental substrate-brooding (Lowe-McConnell 1959
; Kraft and Peters 1963
).
The high diversity of parental care behaviors in Tilapias has prompted many questions concerning its evolutionary history (Lowe-McConnell 1959
; Iles and Holden 1969
; Peters and Berns 1978a,
1982
; Trewavas 1980
, 1983
; Goodwin, Balshine-Earn, and Reynolds 1998
). In this group there are species that spawn and protect their eggs and larvae on the substrate (like sand or gravel) and others which brood them in their buccal cavity.
In addition, the sex of the caregiver also varies: in some species both parents (typically for the species of the A-, B-, and D-Tilapia groups but also in S. galilaeus), in others only the female (very common: all representatives of the genus Oreochromis, T. simonis, and S. caudomarginatus) or only the male (this form of care is rare and only known with certainty from S. melanotheron and S. occidentalis) take care of the offspring. In contrast to most of the fish families in which uniparental care by males is the predominate behavior (Gittleman 1981
; Blumer 1982
), the only known cichlid fish exhibiting paternal care are S. melanotheron (Lowe-McConnell 1959
) and S. occidentalis (Loiselle 1985
).
On the basis of our ND2 data, the two substrate-spawning species T. cabrae and T. mariae are found in relative phylogenetic proximity to the mouthbrooding genera Iranocichla, Sarotherodon, Stomatepia, Tristramella, and Oreochromis and the Lake Tanganyika cichlids in both the MP and NJ analyses (figs. 4
and 5
). It is striking that these species exhibit morphological (such as the morphology of their buccal cavity and the number of gill rakers) or behavioral characteristics that suggest that they have a common ancestry with the mouthbrooding tilapiines. It is assumed that oral transport of eggs was the first step in the evolution of mouthbrooding (Lowe-McConnell 1959
; Baylis 1981
). Tilapia mariae has been observed carrying eggs by mouth from one pit to another. The representatives of the genera Sarotherodon and Oreochromis typically have 13 to 28 gill rakers on the first gill arch, which prevent a loss of eggs during mouthbrooding. In contrast to the other substrate spawners, which have previously been considered as being Tilapia species, T. mariae and T. cabrae have 12 to 15 instead of only 6 to 12 gill rakers (Apfelbach 1969
; Trewavas 1983
). A further similarity to the mouthbrooding tilapiines is the wider head of T. mariae compared with other substrate spawners (Trewavas 1983
). This is, by some workers, considered to be a preadaptation for mouthbrooding because it would permit for the larger buccal volume that is necessary for mouthbrooding behavior (Peters 1961
). On the other hand, one has also to keep in mind that a wider head and the number of gill rakers could also be explained as an adaptation for the feeding methodmost of the so-called Tilapia species are scrapers or pickers, whereas, e.g., the genus Oreochromis are filter feeders. Additional mouthbrooder characteristics of T. mariae are sexual dimorphism and contact behavior of the fry (Apfelbach 1969
). All tree topologies show a clustering of biparental (S. galilaeus), paternal (e.g., S. melanotheron), and maternal (e.g., S. caudomarginatus, all representatives of the genus Oreochromis) mouthbrooding species, but the monophyly of these taxa is in all cases only weakly supported (ML 47, MP 21, NJ 30) (figs. 35
). The albeit weakly indicated monophyly of the representatives of all tilapiine mouthbrooding taxa would confirm Trewavas' (1980)
hypothesis of a single origin of the different mouthbrooding types and rule out Peters and Berns' (1978a
, 1982
) polyphyletic hypothesis. Allozyme analyses (McAndrew and Majumdar 1984
; Sodsuk and McAndrew 1991
; Pouyaud and Agnèse 1995
) and a SATA-satellite DNA study (Franck et al. 1994
) have also found a close relationship between the mouthbrooding types, but the exact relationship remained unresolved in these studies also.
The relationships within the genus Sarotherodon and also its relationships to the genus Oreochromis remain somewhat uncertain. However, that the genus Sarotherodon is monophyletic seems questionable on the basis of this study and was already called into question by Schliewen, Tautz, and Pääbo (1994)
. There are several genera, including the maternal mouthbrooding genera Tristramella and Stomatepia, that are nested within the apparently paraphyletic genus Sarotherodon (figs. 35
). Whereas Trewavas' (1980)
hypothesis for the evolution of parental care in Tilapias did not consider the phylogenetic position of the Israeli genus Tristramella, our analyses strongly indicate that the maternal mouthbrooding species T. simonis is in fact a close relative of the genus Sarotherodon. Moreover, Schliewen, Tautz, and Pääbo (1994)
showed that several Sarotherodon species and additional genera (e.g., Konia, Myaka, and Pungu) of mostly biparental mouthbrooding species of endemic Cameroon tilapiine cichlids cluster with Sarotherodon.
Peters and Berns (1982)
have suggested that the stronger atrophy of the egg attachment system and the larval headglands of the maternal mouthbrooders (Oreochromis) are a strong indication that these species are older than the biparental and paternal mouthbrooders (Sarotherodon), whose organs are less rudimentary. The ML analysis indicates that T. simonis, Stomatepia mariae, Iranocichla hormuzensis, and the genus Sarotherodon, which form an only weakly supported monophyletic group, appear as a sister group to the maternal mouthbrooders of the genus Oreochromis (fig. 3
). This topology disagrees with Peters and Berns' (1978a,
1982
) hypothesis because this sister group relationship indicates that both groups of species are of the same age. However, in the MP and NJ analyses there is no monophyletic grouping of these taxain contrast, in these tree topologies the Sarotherodon group is shown to be paraphyletic and basal to the genus Oreochromis (figs. 4
and 5
). These topologies also contradict the hypothesis of Peters and Berns' (1978a,
1982
) because it would imply that the biparental and paternal mouthbrooding Sarotherodon species are older than the maternal mouthbrooders of the genus Oreochromis. Because all tree topologies are only poorly resolved, they do not allow final conclusions about the evolution of the parental care within this group.
In our composite phylogeny of tilapiines the endemic species of the Barombi-Mbo lake were adopted from Schliewen, Tautz, and Pääbo (1994)
and placed as a sister group to S. galilaeus. A reconstruction of the parental care behavior based on the ML analysis would indicate an evolution of the sex of caregiver from biparental substrate-brooding to maternal mouthbrooding and from maternal mouthbrooding to biparental mouthbrooding (fig. 3
). That maternal mouthbrooding evolved directly from biparental substrate-brooding was also proposed by Goodwin, Balshine-Earn, and Reynolds (1998)
. In contrast to Goodwin, Balshine-Earn, and Reynolds (1998)
, we also included the maternal mouthbrooder (Stiassny 1996
) S. caudomarginatus. Because of this, the MP-based reconstructions indicate that paternal mouthbrooding evolved at least in one case via a maternal mouthbrooding stage (fig. 4
). This result would contradict the hypothesis of Iles and Holden (1969)
who suggested that female-only and male-only care evolved independently from a biparental mouthbrooding stage. However, because of the fact that the relationships between the different species within the Sarotherodon group are only weakly resolved, a detailed reconstruction and final conclusions of the evolution of the sex of the caregiver is still wanting.
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Acknowledgements |
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A publication of relevance to our study (Nagl, S., H. Tichy, W. E., Mayer, I. E. Samonte, B. J. McAndrew, and J. Klein. 2001. Classification and phylogenetic relationships of African Tilapiine fishes inferred from mitochondrial DNA sequences. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 20:361374.) appeared while this article was under review.
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Footnotes |
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Keywords: NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2
cichlids
tilapiine
phylogeny
parental care
mating systems
Address for correspondence and reprints: Axel Meyer, Department of Biology, University of Konstanz, 78457 Konstanz, Germany. axel.meyer{at}uni-konstanz.de
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References |
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