Tooth shape is used to differentiate between morphologically similar species of vertebrates, including fish. This study aimed to quantify tooth shape of three sympatric species: , , and endemic to Lake Kivu, whose existing identification criteria are currently only qualitative. A quantitative tooth shape analysis was performed based on digitized tooth outline data with a subsequent elliptic Fourier analysis to test for differences among the three species. We looked at crown shape and size differences within and at geographical, habitat, and gender levels. No comparison at habitat level was done for because it is found only in littoral zone. The analysis revealed significant tooth shape differences among the three species. had a significantly longer major cusp height and a longer and larger minor cusp than that of It had also a longer major cusp height and a longer and larger minor cusp than that of . Tooth shape differences of and species were not significantly different between littoral and pelagic fish ( > .05) while differences were significant between southern and northern Lake Kivu populations ( < .05). Tooth sizes in and were significantly different, both in height and width as well as in their ratios, and this was true at sex and geographic levels ( < .05), but not at habitat level ( > .05). Tooth shape was also significantly different with sharp teeth for males compared with females of southern populations versus northern ones. These shape- and size-related differences between sexes suggest differences in the foraging strategies toward available food resources in the lake habitat. Further research should explain the genetic basis of the observed pattern.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7319136PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6309DOI Listing

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