Project Details
Behavioral Ecology of cave dwelling and extremophile poeciliid fishes: Influence of darkness, hydrogen sulfide and low food availability on the behavior, reproductive life-history traits and sexual selection in mollies (Poecilia mexicna, P. sulphuraria) and mosquitofisch (Gambusia holbrooki, G. eurystoma)
Applicant
Privatdozent Dr. Martin Plath
Subject Area
Sensory and Behavioural Biology
Term
from 2005 to 2011
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 5453078
Populations of Poecilia mexicana inhabit waters containing naturally occurring, toxic hydrogen sulfide, lightless underground waters or a combination of both (a sulfidic cave: Cueva del Azufre). Previous results from this project revealed pronounced genetic differentiation between the Cueva del Azufre cave fish and surrounding surface populations along with a variety of evolutionary changes regarding behavior and life history traits, suggesting local adaptation and reduced gene-flow among habitat types. I will complete my study on the genetic differentiation of a newly discovered cave form of P. mexicana from a non-sulfidic cave while using microsatellites and the cytochrome b gene as genetic markers. I will compare the behavior evolution of this cave fish (e.g., evolution of non-visual mate choice in response to darkness, potential reduction of energy-demanding behaviors) among several populations of that species with different local adaptations. Furthermore, genetic differentiation and gene-flow will be examined in another sulfidic system, the Banos del Azufre, where a morphologically very specialized poeciliid, P. sulphuraria exists, which may be considered an extreme form of a sulfide-adapted population of the very diverse "P. mexicana-group". Furthermore, I will examine associative mating in the two systems to test if pre-zygotic reproductive isolation mechanisms have evolved, thereby promoting the process of genetic differentiation accompanying local adaptation.
DFG Programme
Research Grants