TY - JOUR
T1 - Ecological speciation in East African freshwater crabs of the genus Arcopotamonaute s Bott, 1955 across a lake–river boundary in the Lake Malawi catchment (Potamoidea: Potamonautidae: Potamonatinae)
AU - Layfield, Harry J
AU - Phelps, Emily
AU - Saxon, Andrew D
AU - Jones, Ben
AU - Gray, Leila
AU - Klaus, Sebastian
AU - Turner, George F
AU - Katongo, Cyprian
AU - Smith, Alan M
AU - Shechonge, Asilatu H
AU - Ngatunga, Benjamin P
AU - Gabagambi, Nestory P
AU - Cumberlidge, Neil
AU - Genner, Martin J
PY - 2024/11/8
Y1 - 2024/11/8
N2 - Geological, climate, and ecosystem changes in Africa probably influenced speciation of Afrotropical freshwater crabs. In total, the subfamily Potamonautinae comprises over 120 species, and this diversity provides a valuable opportunity to explore speciation processes. Here we study diversification of potamonautid crabs in the Lake Malawi catchment, and investigate whether speciation has taken place across a lake–river boundary. Specifically, we reconstruct evolutionary relationships of the Malawi blue crab, Arcopotamonautes orbitospinus (Cunnington, 1907), an endemic of Lake Malawi, and of A. montivagus (Chace, 1953) from rivers and streams draining into Lake Malawi, and smaller lakes within this catchment. Our phylogenetic analysis of over 28 000 single nucleotide polymorphisms shows a monophyletic A. orbitospinus nested within a clade otherwise comprising A. montivagus from across the Lake Malawi catchment (A. montivagus Group I). We also identified a second allopatric clade of A. montivagus from the Rungwe mountains of Tanzania, and neighbouring Zambia (A. montivagus Group II). Morphological differences were apparent between all three groups. Collectively these results show A. montivagus is a paraphyletic riverine taxon that has diversified in allopatry, and that this species entered Lake Malawi and seeded the specialized heavily armoured lacustrine species, A. orbitospinus. We hypothesize that formation of deep-water conditions within Lake Malawi, together with differences in predation pressures between the rivers and lake, provided ecological opportunities for natural selection to drive speciation across the lake–river boundary. We conclude that geographical separation and ecological adaptation are potentially important drivers of evolutionary diversification in these enigmatic freshwater crabs.
AB - Geological, climate, and ecosystem changes in Africa probably influenced speciation of Afrotropical freshwater crabs. In total, the subfamily Potamonautinae comprises over 120 species, and this diversity provides a valuable opportunity to explore speciation processes. Here we study diversification of potamonautid crabs in the Lake Malawi catchment, and investigate whether speciation has taken place across a lake–river boundary. Specifically, we reconstruct evolutionary relationships of the Malawi blue crab, Arcopotamonautes orbitospinus (Cunnington, 1907), an endemic of Lake Malawi, and of A. montivagus (Chace, 1953) from rivers and streams draining into Lake Malawi, and smaller lakes within this catchment. Our phylogenetic analysis of over 28 000 single nucleotide polymorphisms shows a monophyletic A. orbitospinus nested within a clade otherwise comprising A. montivagus from across the Lake Malawi catchment (A. montivagus Group I). We also identified a second allopatric clade of A. montivagus from the Rungwe mountains of Tanzania, and neighbouring Zambia (A. montivagus Group II). Morphological differences were apparent between all three groups. Collectively these results show A. montivagus is a paraphyletic riverine taxon that has diversified in allopatry, and that this species entered Lake Malawi and seeded the specialized heavily armoured lacustrine species, A. orbitospinus. We hypothesize that formation of deep-water conditions within Lake Malawi, together with differences in predation pressures between the rivers and lake, provided ecological opportunities for natural selection to drive speciation across the lake–river boundary. We conclude that geographical separation and ecological adaptation are potentially important drivers of evolutionary diversification in these enigmatic freshwater crabs.
KW - East Africa
KW - speciation
KW - ecological divergence
KW - population genetics
KW - crustacean
KW - adaptive radiation
U2 - 10.1093/evolinnean/kzae031
DO - 10.1093/evolinnean/kzae031
M3 - Article
SN - 2752-938X
VL - 3
JO - Evolutionary Journal of the Linnean Society
JF - Evolutionary Journal of the Linnean Society
IS - 1
ER -