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On the evolutionary significance of a complex etho-morphological trait: The egg-spots of haplochromine cichlid fishes
Project funded by own resources
Project title On the evolutionary significance of a complex etho-morphological trait: The egg-spots of haplochromine cichlid fishes
Principal Investigator(s) Salzburger, Walter
Egger, Bernd
Organisation / Research unit Departement Umweltwissenschaften / Evolutionary Biology (Salzburger)
Project start 01.07.2009
Probable end 30.06.2011
Status Completed
Abstract

The cichlid assemblages of the East African Great Lakes feature an unrivalled rate of speciation and are thus renowned as a prime model system in evolutionary biology. The majority of East African cichlid species are members of a single tribe, the Haplochromini, comprising most riverine East African cichlid species and the species flocks of Lakes Malawi and Victoria. An important feature shared by haplochromines is their special breeding behaviour, in the form of maternal mouthbrooding with females incubating the eggs in their buccal cavities. Mouthbrooding evolved several times during cichlid evolution, but only haplochromines show a characteristic polygynous or polygynandrous maternal mouthbrooding system with males carrying conspicuous egg-spots on the anal fin. These yellow to orange egg-like spots have an important function in the courtship and spawning behaviour of haplochromines, as they serve as intraspecific sexual advertisment to attract females and to maximize breeding success. The number, arrangement and morphology of haplochromine egg-spots differ between species (and to some degree also within species) and some haplochromines even lack egg-spots entirely, either due to their ancestral phylogenetic branching or because they lost their dummies secondarily. The function of egg spots has been under experimental investigation and various hypotheses have been formulated. So far, behavioural studies corroborate the idea that egg spots are an evolutionary important feature of haplochromine cichlids. This proposal aims to reveal the evolutionary significance of egg spots - a complex etho-morphological trait, applying behavioral experiments and uncovering its genetic and developmental basis using molecular techniques.

Financed by Other funds
   

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