Showing posts with label Amphilophus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amphilophus. Show all posts

Thursday, August 31, 2017

Charles Darwin en Nicaragua

Durante aproximadamente un siglo, las ideas de Charles Darwin sobre la selección de pareja como un motor hacia el desarrollo de especies nuevas, fueron efectivamente desvaloradas dentro del Reino Animalia. Es difícil encontrar un caso donde es probable que dos especies se formaron dentro de una, en una sola población, con sus miembros en permanente contacto. Mientras siempre ha existido la idea que la selección de pareja puede ser un factor importante en el desarrollo de una especie nueva, en la gran mayoría de los casos, es poco probable que no hubiera otro factor, como una barrera geográfica, en la historia del desarrollo de las especies, en particular con animales vertebrados.

El tipo de formación de dos especies de una población de una sola especie, a través de la selección de pareja, es llamado especiación simpátrica. Sin embargo, el caso de la especiación entre un grupo de peces en las aguas de Lago Cocibolca (Lago Nicaragua) y las lagunas cratéricas alrededor, ha sido fundamental en el regreso de este concepto. El grupo de peces lleva el nombre "mojarra" en Nicaragua, y son varias especies, algunas descritas y otras no, del genero Amphilophus.

El tiempo de existencia de las lagunas cratéricas de Nicaragua varía entre unos diez mil y cien mil años, relativamente poco para los procesos de evolución típicos que forman especies nuevas. A pesar de su relativamente reducido tiempo de existencia en esas lagunas, se ha comprobado que procesos rápidos de evolución han sucedido en varias lagunas, a través de estudios morphológicos en Xiloá y Apoyo, y estudios genéticos en varias lagunas. Las aguas de cada laguna son aisladas de otros cuerpos de agua.

Las mojarras se hacen pareja y se anidan dentro de la planta que se llama Chara, en la Laguna de Apoyo. Foto Topi Lehtonen.
Un reportaje sobre los estudios ejecutados por GAIA en las lagunas fue publicado esta semana en El Nuevo Diario, en el cual se mencionan las especies endémicas de este grupo ya identificadas y descritas, de las lagunas de Apoyo, Xiloá y Asososca Managua, y también se menciona un estudio en curso en la Laguna de Masaya, sitio reconocido en desahucio por su nivel de contaminación por basura y aguas residuales que entran en la laguna desde las ciudades aledañas.

Del reportaje en El Nuevo Diario, 30 Agosto, 2017.

Para los científicos, además de que sean especies nuevas que en si tienen importancia, estas mojarras demuestran evidencia de haber sufrido procesos de especiación simpátrica durante el relativamente corto tiempo que habitan las lagunas cratéricas, por lo que sean de gran importancia como sujetos de estudio. Es una lástima que Charles Darwin nunca vino a Nicaragua, para que vea las mojarras que adornan a los lagos y las lagunas de Nicaragua. Si estuviera vivo hoy Charles Darwin, estaría en la Laguna de Apoyo, buceando con nosotros!

De Geiger, McCrary, y Schliewen, 2010.

Estudios de campo en la Laguna de Apoyo. Foto Jeffrey McCrary.

Los peces en la Laguna de Apoyo abundan entre estructuras rocosas. 


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Saturday, November 22, 2014

Cichlids of Laguna de Apoyo by Willem Heijns

People are always asking what is to see in Laguna de Apoyo during a SCUBA dive. Lots of folks have Open Water certifications these days, but most of them have only dived in tropical oceans, over coral reefs where brightly colored fish dazzle. Tropical coral reefs are indeed among the best eye candy on the planet. But people are intrigued when they learn that we SCUBA dive in tropical lakes when the ocean is so close. It's obvious to them that something very attractive must be going on down there to keep our attention, with coral reefs just a couple of hours away.

We at FUNDECI/GAIA study the fish in this lake and in other freshwater locations in Nicaragua. Lake Apoyo has clear, warm water (28 degrees C) which makes it easy to view the fish underwater. Our divers have been collecting data on the fishes of Lake Apoyo for years, learning about the differences between very recently evolved species and even documenting the species themselves. Over the years, other research groups have also become interested in the cichlid fishes of Lake Apoyo and neighboring lakes, especially the group headed by Axel Meyer of the University of Konstanz.


The fish of the Midas cichlid group are definitely the main attraction in Laguna de Apoyo. Since the lake was formed some 23,000 years ago, the lake has been colonized by a few species of fish, but the dearth of species in the lake has left numerous, broad niches available for specialization in feeding, refuge behavior, and nesting activity. The Midas cichlids in the lake have undergone a remarkable evolution, dividing into numerous species. Six species from this group which are only found in Laguna de Apoyo are now accepted in the scientific community. Publications which present these six species can be found here, here, and here. These cichlids are terribly similar, but they do not interbreed, and they even use different timing and locations for nesting in the lake

The video presented above, produced by Willem Heijns, is among the best quality of videos showing some of these species in their natural habitat. We hope you enjoy seeing this video. Thank you, Willem!

Laguna de Apoyo

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Willem Heijns
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Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Under the water

We spend hundreds of hours per year under the water in Laguna de Apoyo, in counts of fish, documentation of the quality of the habitat where they live, the vegetation found there, and yes, even in retrieving the trash that folks discard which ends up all along the lake bottom. Here is a small collection of photos which show what we see when we are down there, in the most beautiful spot in Nicaragua. In the photoessay below, you can experience what one of our interns saw during a study of the fish with the director of the Gaia Program, Dr. Jeffrey McCrary. Dr. McCrary is leading an international team in the study of the fishes of Laguna de Apoyo, and to date five new species have been discovered as part of the program. 
These fry of an Amphilophus zaliosus pair recently hatched in a nest hole which is often seen with babies. 

Lots of fish are hanging out in this site, including a probable male Amphilophus zaliosus in breeding coloration in the center of the photo. 


Counting fish along a transect.

Juveniles and nonbreeding adult Amphilophus seek refuge under rocks in Laguna de Apoyo.

Breeding season is approaching, and breeding pairs are forming. A pair of Amphilophus zaliosus are in the foreground, and a pair of jaguar cichlids, Parachromis managuensis, are in the background. 
As can be seen from the photos, several Midas cichlid species are locally abundant in the waters of Laguna de Apoyo. Of the six species recognized in Laguna de Apoyo in this group, the most abundant of the group in most locations is the little Apoyo cichlid, Amphilophus astorquii. Other fish species are in the lake, too: Atherinella sardina, Poecilia sphenops, and Parachromis managuensis, as well as some invasive species.
Fish ahead!

A multispecies school of Amphilophus cichlids.

The species of Amphilophus cichlids in Laguna de Apoyo vary by body shape, spot pattern, and background colors. 

Dozens of cichlids are always under this rock!

Much of the lake bottom is covered with recently eroded sediments which cover the rocks and destroy all the high-quality habitat. Furthermore, ordinary garbage accumulates along our transects, such as this plastic cup, sold by the local bars. 


In some areas where waves clean the substrate, the lake bottom is covered with fine mud or sand. 

Fragments of snail shells (Pyrgophorus coronatus) litter the surface in many places. Snails are an important component of the diets of the Amphilophus species flock in Laguna de Apoyo. 

Filamentous algae has displaced Chara vegetation along the bottom in much of the lake. We do not understand why Chara often disappears from the lake, although it is known that tilapia will consume large quantities of it. 
In shallow areas with small rocks, juveniles of the invasive species Gobiomorus dormitor abound. 

Many shallow areas are covered with snail shell fragments, demonstrating the abundance of snails in Laguna de Apoyo.
A human-altered waterscape in Laguna de Apoyo. Filamentous algae and a plastic beverage bottle displace native fish and vegetation. 
Silversides, Atherinella sardina, put on a show in the water column. Silverside schools may exceed ten thousand individuals. 
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Tuesday, April 30, 2013

SCUBA diving in Lake Apoyo, Nicaragua


Amphilophus zaliosus
Hundreds of young arrow cichlids (Amphilophus zaliosus) are only perhaps sixty days from hatching. Although they have been abandoned by their parents, they continue to school at a nesting site. Photo by Martin Cabrera.
We often get asked what can be seen while SCUBA diving in Laguna de Apoyo. Nicaragua has lots of lakes and rives, but most tropical freshwater sites here and elsewhere have low visibility. Lake Apoyo visibility is almost always 5-12 meters at the locations where we dive.

The fish of Lake Apoyo are special, too. The most commonly seen fish are members of the Midas cichlid species complex. Six species in this group have been discovered  in Lake Apoyo, all of which evolved in the lake and inhabit only this lake. The first to be discovered was the arrow cichlid (Amphilophus zaliosus) in 1976 by a professor at University of California-Berkeley, George W. Barlow. Most of these six endemic species can be seen while scuba diving.

Arrow cichlids, like all the other members of the Midas cichlid species complex in Lake Apoyo, nest in rocky reefs, but they also nest often over sandy bottoms in water from 4 to 8 m depth. All the fish in this species complex, which is found throughout the San Juan River watershed and a few rivers to the north and south, provide parental care to their fry for several weeks after hatching. Here is a photo of the arrow cichlid fry after the parents have abandoned them. These fish are no longer defended from predation by the parental units. 

Amphilophus zaliosus
These arrow cichlids have not yet dispersed but are no longer receiving parental care. Photo by Martin Cabrera. 
The parental units expend a lot of energy during the seven weeks of care of the fry. Predators constantly attempt to capture the small fish and they are fended off by the parental units. It's a long seven weeks, not including the courtship and egg-incubation. Parental units often look battered and even emaciated at the end of the period of parental care. However, the great majority of nests never make it to seven weeks fry age, because predation and disease will have killed of the entirety of their nests.

Dive Lake Apoyo
After a scuba dive in Laguna de Apoyo, the clearest lake in Nicaragua. Photo by Martin Cabrera.
Lake Apoyo is the easiest of all locations for scuba diving in Nicaragua. We are located only one hour from downtown Managua. Estacion Biologica collects data at four sites in Laguna de Apoyo, all have easy reach from the shore, and great views below. We enter our study areas from the shore, along property managed by Estacion Biologica.
Life is good after a dive. Photo by Martin Cabrera.
One vital reason for our monitoring program is the bigmouth sleeper, Gobiomorus dormitor. This fish looks a lot like a goby, only much larger as an adult. This voracious predator sits quietly on the lake bottom, where it awaits an injudicious move by any appropriately sized fish, when it strikes with lightning speed. The fish of Lake Apoyo spent thousands of years without the threat of bigmouth sleepers or anything similar, so they are now evolutionarily naive to the grave threats this fish presents.
The Bigmouth Sleeper (Gobiomorus dormitor) is a dangerous predator. It was introduced into Lake Apoyo in 1991. Photo by Martin Cabrera. 
Bright blotches, usually randomly placed, are not exactly uncommon among fish. These colors are usually caused by a specific mutation, such as in the goldfish, which is simply a selectively bred variant of a wild carp. Midas cichlids have a similarly brightly colored variation in the wild, although the "golds" are much more common in some locations than in others. Lake Apoyo, for instance, is considered to have no gold forms. Nonetheless, as the photo below demonstrates, gold forms may also be found in Lake Apoyo.
Gold form Midas cichlids are relatively common in some lakes, but not in Lake Apoyo. Fish such as the one in this photo are exceedingly rare. Photo by Martin Cabrera. 
Which gene(s) control the gold color form in the Midas cichlids is not known. Nor does anyone understand why Lake Apoyo has so few golds. In comparison to most other natural habitats of the Midas cichlids, Lake Apoyo has far fewer golds.
Some Midas cichlids show 
This clownish coloration is quite common among Midas cichlids in Lake Managua, some parts of Lake Nicaragua, and other volcanic crater lakes such as Lake Masaya and Lake Xiloa. Why is it so rare in Lake Apoyo? We don't know.
Amphilophus in Lake Apoyo, Nicaragua
This breeding, gold form Midas cichlid stays near the nesting hole. Photo by Martin Cabrera.
Midas cichlids are territorial when nesting. A breeding pair will occupy a natural or constructed hole, often at the base of rocks, in which a hard, flat, usually vertical surface can be utilized to adhere eggs. The pair will defend the site vigorously against predators and usurpers.
The gold-normal breeding pair linger near the nesting cavity. Photo by Martin Cabrera. 
The great majority of Midas cichlid nests do not result in the eventual creation of new adults. Hundreds of eggs are produced in each spawning, but very few fry will reach the age to swim away from the parental units and begin life independently of them.
The Bigmouth Sleeper has occupied Lake Apoyo only two decades, but is now very common. Photo by Martin Cabrera.
The newest reason for the demise of nests in Lake Apoyo, the bigmouth sleeper, has become very common in the lake. Some of the Midas cichlid species of Lake Apoyo are so rare that the bigmouth sleeper could even make the species disappear. Who would even know if a fish species in Lake Apoyo went extinct?
Filamentous algae forms a carpet on the lake bottom where Chara macroalgae was once abundant, placing much of the life in the lake at risk. Photo by Martin Cabrera. 
The bigmouth sleeper has a neutrally colored, mottled pattern along its sides and back, making its detection difficult. It sits on the bottom, awaiting a false move by some other fish. It strikes rapidly, with the intention to sink its long, fine teeth into the prey and then gradually move the prey into the mouth to swallow it.
bigmouth sleeper
A Bigmouth Sleeper (Gobiomorus dormitor) pair in courtship in Laguna de Apoyo. Photo by Martin Cabrera. 
The success of bigmouth sleeper (Gobiomorus dormitor) during the two decades of its time in Lake Apoyo is startling. They are extremely common. Recent research conducted by Topi Lehtonen and the research team at FUNDECI/GAIA demonstrated that the Midas cichlids of Lake Apoyo do not recognize the threat these fish present to their fry.
Amphilophus fry
These Midas cichlid fry must share their nest space with garbage left by humans. Photo by Martin Cabrera.
Lake Apoyo's fish species are facing several threats from humans. Soil introduction into the lake is higher than ever, coming from constructions in the watershed. Predation and loss of habitat by introduced species have done lots of damage to the species found here. And of course, garbage follows humans everywhere we go. The fish of Lake Apoyo have no choice but to utilize garbage-filled areas of the lake to feed and reproduce.
dive Nicaragua
Juvenile Amphilophus cichlids in Lake Apoyo, Nicaragua. Photo by Martin Cabrera. 
Lots of juvenile Midas cichlids are present year-round in Lake Apoyo. By diving during the different seasons, one can see the smaller fish grow and, by the end of about a year, start their first anniversary as members of the next breeding stock. The intense uses (and misuses) of Lake Apoyo by human beings requires that we assure adequate habitat for these fishes in all their life stages.
blind Amphilophus
A blind Amphilophus astorquii in Lake Apoyo, Nicaragua. Photo by Martin Cabrera.
To date, six species of the Midas cichlid species complex have been described in Lake Apoyo. All of them are only found in this lake. There are eight volcanic crater lakes such as Lake Apoyo, near the Nicaraguan Great Lakes, which have multiple species of Midas cichlids in them. What was once thought to be only one or a few species is now considered to be dozens of species, with very small ranges, and in some cases, populations of only a few thousands of adults. One of those species with a very small population is the chancho cichlid, Amphilophus chancho. It is the largest of the Midas cichlid species complex found in Lake Apoyo, with males sometimes reaching well over a kilogram weight.
Amphilophus chancho nest
Amphilophus chancho defending fry in a nesting hole in Lake Apoyo. Photo by Martin Cabrera. 
Child-rearing is an expensive venture for most species. It is especially so for the Midas cichlid species of Lake Apoyo, too. Providing care for the fry means eating less and lower quality food. It also means getting in harm's way. The parental units must confront potential predators and utilize displays, threats, and if nothing else works, direct attacks to drive away the fish and crabs that would want to eat the fry. Adults often look emaciated and battered at the end of the breeding season.
Amphilophus fishes near a hole beneath a rock in Lake Apoyo, Nicaragua. Photo by Martin Cabrera.
A scuba dive with the staff at FUNDECI/GAIA usually means seeing most of the six species of the Midas cichlid species complex, perhaps about five hundred individuals in total. Occasionally, we get to see jaguar cichlids (Parachromis managuensis) up close, while nesting. It also means seeing the ubiquitous bigmouth sleeper, lots of them, perhaps upward of a hundred individuals in a single dive. Other fish, crabs, and the dramatic undwater views round out most dives. Some of the dives take you to thermal vents, where clear, warm water flows from between rocks into the lake. And especially during the appropriate season (November through February), lots of fry in nests!
An adult bigmouth sleeper uses a hole beneath a rock as a hiding spot, from which to hunt. Photo by Martin Cabrera.
Diving in Lake Apoyo is different than in the ocean and generally much easier. No currents, waves, poisonous animals produce dangers here. The dives are rewarding and especially so when contemplating the rarity of some of the fishes, to which our divers contribute to study and protect them. Please contact us if you would like to dive with us in Lake Apoyo.
Parachromis managuensis
Jaguar cichlid (Parachromis managuensis) fry are feeding in open water outside their nest cavity in Lake Apoyo, Nicaragua. A small clump of Chara vegetation can be seen in the lower left. 
dive Lake Apoyo
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Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Dive Laguna de Apoyo

Most tropical lakes have dark water, but a few, like Laguna de Apoyo, make for excellent SCUBA diving. This lake is sitting in a volcanic crater, formed 23,000 years ago. Our research group is busy here, studying the fishes of this lake, because something interesting happened during those years since the volcano left a huge hole in the ground, it filled with water, and the fish entered. Some of them transformed into new species, and they provide scientists with a great field location to consider how evolution occurs. We are responding to the call to study these fascinating fish, all evolved from Amphilophus citrinellus, the Midas cichlid.

Midas cichlid
Juvenile fishes leave their refuge to investigate divers in their area. Photo by Garey Knop.
Our group has discovered five new species in this group of fishes in Lake Apoyo. Adding to the list the arrow cichlid, Amphilophus zaliosus, discovered by Barlow and Munsey in 1976, and we have to date, a group of six closely related fishes with similar appearances, plus an unknown number of other fish that may also be recognized someday as unique species. Several of those fish are seen in the video below, taken by Garey Knop in one of our monitoring dives.

The fish of this special group are important for more reasons than just for having evolved recently into a rainbow of new species. The members of this species group provide very interesting parental care to their offspring, until the babies are several weeks old. We are very interested in how these special fish choose their mates, find their breeding grounds, and defend their fry. Here is another video by Garey Knop, in which a pair of arrow cichlids (Amphilophus zaliosus) are defending their fry, only three days since becoming free-swimming. The fry are difficult to see, but there are about 1200 of them, usually beneath the female (the smaller of the parents).
This breeding pair has made a nesting site in a featureless area, with filamentous algae covering the muddy/sandy substrate. The pair dug a hole about 80 cm wide to uncover a basalt rock surface where the eggs were deposited and fertilized. The nearest nest to this one was about ten meters away. Relatively few fish passed through the area, excepting the harmless Atherinella sardina (silversides). Both parents were busy, vigorously defending the fry. During our half hour watching the pair, the fry boldly approached us, and some of them fed on the skin on the photographer's hand! 

laguna de apoyo
Garey feels at home underwater. Lake Apoyo does not have dangerous fish or currents. Photo by Garey Knop.
Dive Nicaragua
Lots of blind fish are found in Lake Apoyo. A parasite is suspected, although the eyes are removed by other fishes once the fish go blind. The epidermis of this fish has covered the orbit after the eye was extracted. This fish has several slash marks caused by other fishes in their attempts to bite the eyes. Photo by Garey Knop.
This blind fish shows the eye clouded by cataract. The opposite eye had already been eaten by other fish. Note the caudal fin missing a large piece, presumably eaten by some predator. Photo by Garey Knop. 
laguna de apoyo
Crabs (Potamocarcinus nicaraguensis) are common in Lake Apoyo. Photo by Garey Knop.
In a typical monitoring dive, we see about a thousand fish. Almost every dive we see a crab.  From November through January, lots of fish are reproducing, and we can watch them provide parental care up close. Lake Apoyo has the clearest and cleanest water of any lake in Central America.

Dive Nicaragua
We gather data from the best perspective, watching the fish from a few meters distance. Photo by Garey Knop.
Would you like to help us study these fishes? If you are a certified open water diver, you can accompany our staff on a monitoring dive, and help us learn more about these fascinating fish to protect them better. Please let us know-we will take you on a dive.
scuba diving
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