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Sexual selection and speciation: Mechanisms in Lake Victoria cichlid fish PhD Thesis of Martine Maan Universiteit Leiden Defence May 11th 2006 SUMMARY Aims and Scope In this thesis, I investigate the selective forces acting on colour traits and mate preferences for these traits in Lake Victoria cichlid fish. The rationale behind this objective is as follows: whereas it is increasingly appreciated that the tremendous colour variation among haplochromine cichlids plays an important role in both inter- and intraspecific mate choice, very little is known about the processes that drive (or constrain) the evolution of these colour signals and colour preferences in the first place. Sexual signalling may be subject to a variety of evolutionary pressures, exerting selection on both the senders and receivers of sexual signals. Insight in these selection pressures is required to assess the importance of haplochromine colours for the evolution of their extraordinary diversity. I focus on two representative model systems: a pair of sibling species in the genus Pundamilia (Chapters 2-6) and the highly polymorphic species Neochromis omnicaeruleus (Chapters 7-8). In both laboratory and field conditions, I investigate the nature and strength of several possible determinants of haplochromine colour signalling. I evaluate the consequences of my findings for the hypothesis that sexual selection by mate choice contributes to haplochromine speciation. Summary of the Chapters Chapters 2-6: blue and red: the divergence of Pundamilia pundamilia and Pundamilia nyererei Pundamilia pundamilia (Seehausen et al. 1998a) and P. nyererei (Witte-Maas & Witte 1985) are two very closely related species of Lake Victoria cichlids, that form reproductively isolated and ecologically differentiated sympatric sister species in some localities, but interbreeding colour morphs or incipient species in other localities. They represent a common pattern of colour variation among Lake Victoria haplochromine cichlids (Seehausen et al. 1999c). Pundamilia pundamilia males are metallic grey-blue and Pundamilia nyererei males are yellow laterally and bright red dorsally (see Figure 5.1, page 81). The two species are morphologically similar; the cryptically coloured females can be distinguished only with difficulty. Where water clarity permits colour signal transduction, the two species are differentiated, females have species-assortative mating preferences and use male SEXUAL SELECTION & SPECIATION coloration as a choice criterion (Seehausen & Van Alphen 1998). Within P. nyererei, male coloration is a more extreme red where water clarity and hence signal transduction is better. These observations lead to the hypothesis that sexual selection has been a driving force in the divergence of this species pair. This scenario rests on the premise that the phenotypic traits responsible for reproductive isolation between sister species evolve under sexual selection within species. However, interspecific differences in characters subject to mate choice do not necessarily signify that sexual selection was the cause of their divergence (Lande 1981; West-Eberhard 1983; Boake 2002). In Chapter 2, I tested this premise in Pundamilia nyererei. I studied a population at Makobe Island in the western Speke Gulf (Seehausen & Bouton 1997; Figure 6.1 on page 93), where the water is relatively clear. I carried out behavioural mate-choice experiments in the laboratory, field observations on territorial males in the lake, and a mesocosm experiment under semi-natural conditions, in which actual mating occurred. I found that male red coloration is subject to directional sexual selection by female mate choice: in both laboratory and field conditions, females responded more frequently to the courtship displays of brighter red males than to those of less bright males. This is consistent with the hypothesis that intraspecific sexual selection through female choice has driven the divergence in male coloration between P. nyererei and P. pundamilia. I also found that male territoriality is vital for male reproductive success, and that females tend to mate with more than one male for the fertilisation of a single clutch of eggs. In Chapters 3 and 4, I investigated whether female preferences in Pundamilia may be driven by selection for ‘good genes’, and I assessed the potential for this selection to contribute to the divergence of P. pundamilia and P. nyererei. First (Chapter 3) I studied fitness correlates of male coloration in Pundamilia nyererei. As demonstrated in Chapter 2, male red coloration in this species is subject to intraspecific sexual selection by female mate choice. Here, in the same field population, I found that variation in the extent and brightness of male coloration elements was not associated with variation in a set of strongly interrelated indicators of male dominance: male size, territory size and territory location. Instead, male territory size and coloration were independent predictors of male quality: female preferences for bright red males and males with large territories both selected against heavily parasitized males. Consistent with parasite-mediated sexual selection (Hamilton & Zuk 1982), males had higher and more variable parasite loads than females. I also showed that male coloration is carotenoid-based, illustrating the potential for honest signalling: carotenoids, while probably a limiting resource, are necessary for a variety of beneficial physiological functions, particularly in immune defence (Olson & Owens 1998; Hill 1999). Consequently, carotenoid displays are physiologically costly to produce and maintain, and thereby fulfil the requirements of an honest signal of individual quality (Zahavi 1975; Lozano 1994). To investigate whether parasite-mediated sexual selection might have contributed to the divergence of female mating preferences and male colours between P. pundamilia and P. nyererei, I also studied the relationship between male 2 SUMMARY nuptial coloration and parasite load in P. pundamilia from Makobe Island (Chapter 4). As described above, P. pundamilia males have metallic grey-blue bodies and dorsal fins, but their anal and caudal fins can be bright red. I found that this red coloration of P. pundamilia fins seems to be chemically similar to that in the body and fins of P. nyererei, but that it is not significantly associated with parasite load. Instead, I found that the blue coloration on the body and dorsal fin is negatively correlated with parasite load. I also found that parasite infestation rates differ quantitatively between the species, in a way that is consistent with species differences in diet and microhabitat. These results suggest that at an island where the sister species are genetically and ecologically well differentiated, parasite-mediated sexual selection within each species could cause divergent selection between the species on male coloration and parasite resistance. Hence, divergent sexual selection may not be inconsistent with ‘good genes’ models of sexual selection. I conclude that in populations where P. pundamilia and P. nyererei are ecologically differentiated, parasite-mediated sexual selection may strengthen reproductive isolation between the two species. Divergent parasite-mediated sexual selection may not be enough to drive species divergence. This is because intermediate phenotypes are likely to experience intermediate parasite exposure rates and may therefore do well in intermediate habitats. As a result, assortative mating will not evolve. In Chapter 5, I therefore investigated another mechanism, that could have driven the divergent evolution of male coloration and female mating preferences between P. pundamilia and P. nyererei: divergent sensory drive. Several recent studies have presented evidence for divergent sensory drive in species that use visual signals in sexual communication (Boughman 2001; Fuller 2002; Leal & Fleishman 2004), indicating that it may be a potent driving force in speciation (Endler & McLellan 1988; Boughman 2002). The hypothesis that sensory drive has been involved in the divergence of P. pundamilia and P. nyererei (Seehausen et al. 1997a) predicts that i) the photic environment in the microhabitat of the two species differs, ii) visual systems of the two species have diverged in adaptation to these different photic environments, and that iii) within a species, females prefer more conspicuous over less conspicuous males. As demonstrated in Chapter 2, the latter is the case for at least one of the two species: the red coloration of P. nyererei males is subject to directional sexual selection by female choice and the extent and brightness of red is negatively correlated with parasite load (Chapter 3). As demonstrated in Chapter 4, the extent of blue coloration in P. pundamilia males is negatively correlated with parasite load too. Here, I quantified the light environments of P. pundamilia and P. nyererei at Makobe Island and I demonstrated that they differ significantly: P. nyererei, which breeds in deeper water than P. pundamilia, inhabits a more red-shifted habitat. Whereas P. nyererei and P. pundamilia differ in visual properties at the molecular level (Carleton et al. 2005), it was unknown whether these species also differ in the perception of red and blue stimuli, in a way that could explain the divergent mating preferences of the two species. I used the optomotor response test to measure the contextindependent behavioural responses to coloured light in both species. I found that 3 SEXUAL SELECTION & SPECIATION the species differ in the predicted direction: P. pundamilia is more sensitive to blue light and P. nyererei is more sensitive to red light. I conclude that divergent sensory drive in a heterogeneous environment may have driven the divergence of P. pundamilia and P. nyererei. The fully sympatric distribution of the two species suggests that this process occurred without geographical isolation. Currently, the potentially isolating effects of parasite-mediated sexual selection for bright colours (Chapters 3 and 4) could further contribute to the maintenance of reproductive isolation between P. pundamilia and P. nyererei. Over the last decades, water transparency in Lake Victoria has been declining (Verschuren et al. 2002). Because many haplochromine cichlids rely on visual cues for mate recognition (Seehausen & Van Alphen 1998; Knight & Turner 2004), increased turbidity poses a threat to species diversity because it affects the rate of hybridisation between closely related species (Seehausen et al. 1997a). Also P. pundamilia and P. nyererei increasingly hybridise as water transparency decreases, and in extremely turbid water, single populations of slightly variable coloration are found (Seehausen 1997). Given that interspecific mate choice is affected by water transparency, the nature and strength of sexual selection on male coloration within species may be affected too. Indeed, across populations of P. nyererei, water transparency and the intensity of male coloration are correlated (Seehausen et al. 1997a). However, two different mechanisms may account for this relationship: i) female mating preferences and male colour may co-evolve in response to variation in water transparency, or ii) the strength of selection on male coloration by female mating preferences may be a function of signal transduction through the water, without mating preferences evolving themselves. I investigated these alternatives in Chapter 6. I studied the mate choice behaviour of a P. nyererei population from turbid water, and I used the same laboratory set-up as in Chapter 2 to allow for comparison of the clear and the turbid water populations. I found that in the population from turbid water, female preference for male red coloration is significantly weaker than in the population from clear water. I also found that both the amount and the hue of male red coloration differ significantly between populations, consistent with adaptation to the different photic habitats of the two populations. These findings suggest that the observed correlation between male coloration and water transparency is not mediated by environmental variation alone. Rather, they indicate that female mating preferences have evolved in response to this variation. This is the first evidence for intraspecific preference-trait co-evolution in cichlid fish, confirming the earlier suggestion that the decrease in Lake Victoria water transparency affects both interspecific mate choice and intraspecific sexual selection (Seehausen et al. 1997a). This underlines the importance of measures to counteract the ongoing eutrophication of Lake Victoria. Chapters 7-8: the colour morphs of Neochromis omnicaeruleus By definition, speciation by sexual selection requires variation in mate preferences and preferred traits within species. Neochromis omnicaeruleus is a suitable model system to study such intraspecific variation, because it is one of the most 4 SUMMARY polychromatic haplochromines known (Seehausen 1996). In addition to the blotch polymorphism which is the subject of Chapter 8, there is considerable colour variation among the individuals belonging to the presumably ancestral, not-blotched phenotype: male coloration ranges from sky-blue to yellow-red and females are grey-blue to yellow (see Figure 7.1 on page 113). In Chapter 7, I present the first investigation of the blue/yellow polychromatism of N. omnicaeruleus. In a wild population at Makobe Island, I found that male colour is associated with size and sexual maturity: yellow males are smaller than blue males and tend to be sexually immature. In females, size and maturity do not differ between colour types. Laboratory crosses revealed that there is a heritable component to the observed colour variation: yellow parents produced more yellow offspring than blue parents. Together with repeated aquarium observations of yellow individuals that gradually become blue, these data suggest that yellow males change to blue as they approach sexual maturity, and that the occurrence and timing of this transition is influenced by both environmental and genetic effects. Importantly, some males mature and may start breeding while they are still yellow. Because haplochromine colour patterns mediate inter- and intraspecific mate choice (Seehausen & Van Alphen 1998; Seehausen et al. 1999b; Knight & Turner 2004; this thesis), the blue-yellow polychromatism of N. omnicaeruleus might serve as a target for diversifying sexual selection and provide a starting point for species divergence. Indeed, this polychromatism resembles the colour variation present among sister species of other haplochromine cichlids (Florin 1991; Seehausen et al. 1999c). In addition to the blue-yellow phenotypes, two types of blotched morphs occur in both sexes of N. omnicaeruleus: orange-blotched and white-blotched (Figure 8.4 on page 128). Similar blotch colour polymorphisms are observed in several East African haplochromine cichlids, often associated with sex reversal genes. In N. omnicaeruleus, blotch-linked dominant female determiners can be compensated by autosomal male rescue genes, required to create blotched males. These associations and interactions between sex and colour genes generate selection favouring matings between matching genotypes that yield even offspring sex ratios. Therefore, blotch polymorphisms and sex determination genes may play an important role in the evolution of haplochromine species diversity (Lande et al. 2001). In N. omnicaeruleus, matings between blotched phenotypes and those plain phenotypes that do not possess rescue genes yield distorted offspring sex ratios. Most colour-sex combinations exert mating preferences that would avoid this, but blotched females do not exert any preferences (Seehausen et al. 1999b). Possibly, the spread of assortative mating preference genes in blotched females is precluded by the extremely low abundance of blotched males in the population studied: whereas about half of all females is blotched, 99% of the males has the plain phenotype. Since laboratory experiments on the genetics of the system suggested that blotched males should not be uncommon, and because the blotched colour pattern seems very conspicuous, Seehausen et al. (1999b) hypothesised that blotched fish may suffer increased predation from visual hunters. This idea is investigated in Chapter 8. In a 5 SEXUAL SELECTION & SPECIATION predation experiment using wild kingfishers, I found that blotched fish indeed incur more predator attacks. Under water observations in the lake further suggested that sexual dimorphism in behaviour may account for an additional risk for males. A population census however showed that blotched males are rare already as juveniles. Yet, female phenotype frequencies were inconsistent with disassortative mating that could account for a lower production of blotched males. Therefore, to explain the scarcity of blotched males in nature there should be selection against blotched males early in life. Alternatively, the genetic architecture underlying the phenotypic distribution of colour and sex is more complex than the minimum model deduced from laboratory crosses. In fact, my results emphasise the need for extensive study of the underlying genetics. Whereas my study does not provide a conclusive explanation for the dynamics of the Neochromis omnicaeruleus blotch polymorphism, it does suggest that differential predation with regard to colour pattern and possibly sex, is an important selective force in the evolution and maintenance of mating preferences and colour gene expression. As such, my results indicate that natural selection by visual predators may hinder the establishment of conspicuous colour morphs in haplochromine cichlid fish. This may hold for other sexually selected colour patterns in haplochromine cichlids too. Thereby, predation may set a limit on the exaggeration of sexually selected traits and increase the potential for honest signalling. Chapter 9: Synthesis In the final Chapter, I summarise the main findings of the work presented in this thesis. I conclude that the evolution of haplochromine colour patterns is subject to several simultaneous selection pressures. First, I found evidence for directional sexual selection for male quality. Second, my work indicates that habitat heterogeneity, in terms of photic environment and parasite exposure, may promote population divergence in male nuptial coloration and female preferences. Consequently, I argue that sexual selection need not be ‘Fisherian’ in order to become divergent. Third, I found that predation pressure and water turbidity may constrain the evolution and persistence of conspicuously coloured morphs and species. Together, these selection pressures and their interactions determine local species diversity. I discuss the implications of my findings for our understanding of haplochromine speciation, and I briefly indicate how my results may affect the direction of future work. 6