Intraspecific Variation in Color and Carotenoids across Environmental Extremes in an African Cichlid.

Ecological and evolutionary physiology Pub Date : 2025-03-01 Epub Date: 2025-05-22 DOI:10.1086/735656
Bethany L Williams, Lauren M Pintor, Matthew B Toomey, Suzanne M Gray
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Abstract

AbstractHuman activities frequently alter environmental conditions and affect the use of sexually selected traits like color in animals. However, the effects of environmental stressors are unlikely to be uniform across populations that experience different environments or between sexes. We aimed to understand the underlying genetic, environmental, and gene-by-environment contributions to color expression in males and females of a sexually dimorphic fish. Pseudocrenilabrus multicolor is a haplochromine cichlid found in environments that vary dramatically, particularly with respect to oxygen and turbidity levels. We reared fish from one swamp (hypoxic, clear) and one river (normoxic, turbid) population in a split-brood design (hypoxic/normoxic × clear/turbid) and then quantified color and carotenoid concentrations. As expected in this sexually dimorphic species, females were far less colorful than males. In males, hypoxia and turbidity were drivers of traits associated with color, suggesting that color was modified under energetically or visually unfavorable conditions. Males in the hypoxic treatment from both populations were not as bright as males reared under normoxic conditions, which corresponds to results observed in wild fish. Males reared in turbid conditions were also marginally less bright along the ventral surface than males reared in clear water. Rearing under turbid conditions reduced carotenoid concentrations in male skin, but carotenoids were not correlated with spectral characteristics of male color. We did not find effects of population on color traits, suggesting that differences in color between wild populations are due to plastic rather than fixed genetic effects. Overall, we provide evidence that hypoxia and turbidity affect signaling traits, although the consequences for mating success remain to be determined.

非洲慈鲷在极端环境下颜色和类胡萝卜素的种内变异。
人类活动经常改变环境条件,影响动物的性选择特征,如颜色的使用。然而,环境压力源的影响在经历不同环境或性别的人群中不太可能是一致的。我们的目的是了解潜在的遗传,环境和基因环境的贡献,雄性和雌性两性二形鱼的颜色表达。多色拟crenilabrus multicolay是一种单氯胺慈鲷,发现环境变化很大,特别是在氧气和浊度水平方面。我们在一个沼泽(缺氧,清澈)和一个河流(常氧,浑浊)种群中饲养鱼,采用分巢设计(缺氧/常氧×清澈/浑浊),然后量化颜色和类胡萝卜素浓度。正如人们所预料的那样,在这种两性二态的物种中,雌性的色彩远不如雄性。在雄性中,缺氧和浑浊是与颜色相关的性状的驱动因素,这表明在能量或视觉不利的条件下,颜色会被改变。两个种群在缺氧条件下的雄鱼不如在正常条件下饲养的雄鱼明亮,这与在野生鱼类中观察到的结果相一致。在浑浊环境中饲养的雄鱼腹部表面的亮度也略低于在清水中饲养的雄鱼。在浑浊条件下饲养降低了雄性皮肤中的类胡萝卜素浓度,但类胡萝卜素与雄性颜色的光谱特征不相关。我们没有发现种群对颜色性状的影响,这表明野生种群之间的颜色差异是由于可塑性而不是固定的遗传效应。总的来说,我们提供的证据表明,缺氧和浑浊会影响信号特征,尽管对交配成功的影响仍有待确定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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