Litcius/Paper detail

Rapid radiation in a highly diverse marine environment

Kosmas Hench, Martin Helmkampf, W. Owen McMillan, Oscar Puebla

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significance Adaptive radiation, the evolutionary process whereby a lineage diversifies over a short period of time, often occurs in geographically isolated or newly formed habitats where colonizing species encounter unoccupied niches and reduced selective pressures. Rapid radiations may also occur in diverse and complex environments, but these cases are less well documented. Here, we show that the hamlets, a group of Caribbean reef fishes, radiated within the last 10,000 generations in a burst of diversification that ranks among the fastest in fishes. Genomic analysis suggests that color pattern diversity is generated by different combinations of alleles at a few genes with large effect. Such a modular genomic architecture of diversification is emerging as a common denominator to a variety of radiations.

Topics & Concepts

Adaptive radiationLineage (genetic)BiologyEvolutionary biologyDiversification (marketing strategy)Ecological nicheNicheHabitatEcologyGenePhylogeneticsGeneticsMarketingBusinessGenetic diversity and population structureIdentification and Quantification in FoodGenomics and Phylogenetic Studies