Publications by authors named "Nidal Karagic"

Determining how internal and external stimuli interact to determine developmental trajectories of traits is a challenge that requires the integration of different subfields of biology. Internal stimuli, such as hormones, control developmental patterns of phenotypic changes, which might be modified by external environmental cues (e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Selection pressures vary based on environmental conditions, influencing traits linked to fitness, particularly in the visual system of organisms.
  • The Nicaraguan lakes provide an example of this, where Midas cichlid fish colonized crater lakes with different light conditions, leading to adaptive changes in their visual systems.
  • About 48% of the observed variations in visual sensitivity are genetically determined and have evolved rapidly, indicating that different selective pressures are at play along the environmental gradient of the lakes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vision is critical for most vertebrates, including fish. One challenge that aquatic habitats pose is the high variability in spectral properties depending on depth and the inherent optical properties of the water. By altering opsin gene expression and chromophore usage, cichlid fish modulate visual sensitivities to maximize sensory input from the available light in their respective habitat.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Exaggerated secondary sexual characteristics are apparently costly and seem to defy natural selection. This conundrum promoted the theory of sexual selection. Accordingly, exaggerated secondary sexual characteristics might be ornaments on which female choice is based and/or armaments used during male-male competition.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The visual system of vertebrates has greatly contributed to our understanding of how different molecular mechanisms shape adaptive phenotypic diversity. Extensive work on African cichlid fishes has shown how variation in opsin gene expression mediates diversification as well as convergent evolution in colour vision. This trait has received less attention in Neotropical cichlids, the sister lineage to African cichlids, but the work done so far led to the conclusion that colour vision is much less variable in Neotropical species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The two toothed jaws of cichlid fishes provide textbook examples of convergent evolution. Tooth phenotypes such as enlarged molar-like teeth used to process hard-shelled mollusks have evolved numerous times independently during cichlid diversification. Although the ecological benefit of molar-like teeth to crush prey is known, it is unclear whether the same molecular mechanisms underlie these convergent traits.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vertebrates interact directly with food items through their dentition, and these interactions with trophic resources could often feedback to influence tooth structure. Although dentitions are often considered to be a fixed phenotype, there is the potential for environmentally induced phenotypic plasticity in teeth to extensively influence their diversity. Here, we review the literature concerning phenotypic plasticity of vertebrate teeth.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Teeth are a model system for integrating developmental genomics, functional morphology, and evolution. We are at the cusp of being able to address many open issues in comparative tooth biology and we outline several of these newly tractable and exciting research directions. Like never before, technological advances and methodological approaches are allowing us to investigate the developmental machinery of vertebrates and discover both conserved and excitingly novel mechanisms of diversification.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Phenotypic plasticity, particularly during development, allows organisms to rapidly adjust to different environmental conditions. Yet, it is often unclear whether the extent and direction of plastic changes are restricted by an individual's ontogeny. Many species of cichlid fishes go through ontogenetic changes in visual sensitivity, from short to long wavelengths, by switching expression of cone opsin genes crucial for colour vision.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • During early development, the light conditions significantly affect the expression of visual opsin genes in cichlids, with red light prompting a switch to long-wavelength sensitive opsins.
  • Fish raised in constant darkness for the first 14 days post-hatching experienced developmental delays in various traits compared to those raised under a regular light-dark cycle, including pigmentation and eye development.
  • Dark-reared fish showed an earlier onset of opsin expression but shifted toward long-wavelength sensitivity, potentially linked to altered thyroid hormone levels, despite slower overall developmental progress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Only few fish species have successfully colonized subterranean habitats, but the underlying biological constraints associated with this are still poorly understood. Here, we investigated the influence of permanent darkness on spinal-column development in one species (Midas cichlid, ) with no known cave form, and one (Atlantic molly, ) with two phylogenetically young cave forms. Specifically, fish were reared under a normal light : dark cycle or in permanent darkness (both species).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Midas cichlid fish are a Central American species flock containing 13 described species that has been dated to only a few thousand years old, a historical timescale infrequently associated with speciation. Their radiation involved the colonization of several clear water crater lakes from two turbid great lakes. Therefore, Midas cichlids have been subjected to widely varying photic conditions during their radiation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF