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Science tries to solve the mystery of lantern-fish, but for King penguins they are a delicious snack

Wednesday, October 5th 2022 - 13:55 UTC
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Lantern-fish are one of the species found in the twilight zone. Lantern-fish are one of the species found in the twilight zone.

A new study, led by British Antarctic Survey and the University of Bristol, provides the first evidence that a controversial evolutionary process may be responsible for lantern-fishes becoming one of the most diverse families of fish in the deep sea.

Lantern-fish are small, bioluminescent – meaning they give off light – fishes, present in every ocean around the world. They live between the surface and 1000m deep within the so-called “twilight zone”, and in the Southern Ocean, they are a major consumer of krill – small, shrimp-like creatures – and are an important food source for King penguins and elephant seals.

There are around 250 species of lantern-fish in the oceans, but scientists don’t know how this group of fishes came to be so diverse.

Typically, new species form after a population becomes geographically isolated – by a mountain range or waterway, for example. However, the ocean is vast and unchanging over large areas, and many marine animals can move freely over large distances. By studying lantern-fish, researchers hope to understand more about diversity in the ocean.

Researchers brought together historical records, created maps of lantern-fish distributions and analyzed genetic information to help them understand more about how species diversify in the open ocean.

Using more than 60,000 historical records, the scientists created distribution maps for 161 species. They found that many lantern-fish species have circum-global distributions – meaning they are found in oceans around the world – whereas others are restricted to small areas with particular ocean conditions.

The scientists then reconstructed the evolutionary relationship between 175 lantern-fish species, using around 1000 DNA sequences. By combining these relationships with the distribution maps, the researchers found that closely related species are more likely to overlap in their distribution, compared to species that are more distantly related. This means it is unlikely that geographic isolation was the cause of species diversification.

Dr Jen Freer, a marine ecologist at British Antarctic Survey and lead author on the study says: “This is a really exciting and important finding, because it’s the first global evidence to support the idea of speciation without strict geographical isolation for these fishes. This research is helping us understand more about how species have diversified in the open ocean at a global scale, and also shows how there’s still much more to learn about the evolution of these fishes.”

Prof. Martin Genner from the University of Bristol, who co-authored the study, says: “Lantern-fishes are one of the most diverse and ecologically important groups of marine fishes. This study shows that the ancestral lantern-fish species have divided into multiple species with overlapping distributions. It shows us how the vast species diversity in the sea could have evolved without geographic barriers splitting populations. This idea remains a controversial biological process, so the insights provided by lantern-fishes are extremely valuable for our understanding of evolution.”

Future research is now needed to look closely at the potential factors that allowed sister species to diverge.

Freer, J., Collins, R.A., Tarling, G.A., Collins, M.A., Partridge, J.C., and Genner. M.J., (2022). Global phylogeography of hyperdiverse lanternfishes indicates sympatric speciation in the deep sea. Global Ecology and Biogeography herehttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/geb.13586

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