Origin of endemic species in a moderately isolated ancient lake: The case of a snakehead in Inle Lake, Myanmar

Author:

Fuke Yusuke1ORCID,Musikasinthorn Prachya2,Kano Yuichi34ORCID,Tabata Ryoichi15ORCID,Matsui Shoko16ORCID,Tun Sein78,Yun L. K. C.79,Touch Bunthang10,Thach Phanara10,Watanabe Katsutoshi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Animal Ecology, Graduate School of Science Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

2. Department of Fishery Biology, Faculty of Fisheries Kasetsart University Bangkok Thailand

3. Institute of Decision Science for Sustainable Society Kyushu University Fukuoka Japan

4. Kyushu Open University Fukuoka Japan

5. Lake Biwa Museum Shiga Kusatsu Japan

6. Osaka Museum of Natural History Osaka Japan

7. Inlay Lake Wildlife Sanctuary, Nature and Wildlife Conservation Division, Forest Department Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Conservation, the Republic of the Union of Myanmar Shan State Nyaung Shwe Myanmar

8. Natma Taung National Park Chin State Kanpalet Township Myanmar

9. Hkakaborazi National Park Kachin State Putao Myanmar

10. Inland Fisheries Research and Development Institute of Fisheries Administration Phnom Penh Cambodia

Abstract

AbstractInle Lake is an ancient lake in Myanmar, which is an important area with unique and diverse fauna. Its ichthyofauna is believed to have formed non‐radiatively, but the historical processes are poorly understood. To elucidate the mechanisms that shape species diversity in this moderately isolated biogeographical ‘island’, this study focused on a typical endemic fish of Inle Lake, Channa harcourtbutleri (Channidae, Anabantiformes), with its widely distributed sister species, C. limbata, and estimated the historical distribution and diversification processes of the endemic fish based on genome‐wide polymorphism (MIG‐seq) and mitochondrial DNA data. Channa harcourtbutleri contained two genetically and morphologically distinct groups inhabiting Inle Lake and the surrounding rivers respectively. These two groups were genetically the closest to each other; however, the riverine group showed some similarity to the closely related species, C. limbata from Southeast Asia. The mtDNA haplotypes of the endemic species were not monophyletic; most of the riverine group had haplotypes identical or close to those of C. limbata from the upper Irrawaddy and Salween rivers. The time tree suggested that C. harcourtbutleri diverged from C. limbata in the early Pleistocene and then experienced secondary contact with C. limbata in the late Pleistocene. Genetic and morphological differentiation within C. harcourtbutleri suggests that local adaptation to different environments has played an important role for the coexistence of its two forms with some reproductive isolation. Further, the results highlight the importance of multiple colonization and allopatric speciation in shaping biodiversity in the long‐term, moderately isolated environments.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Kurita Water and Environment Foundation

Sumitomo Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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