Abstract
Tropical freshwater lakes are well-known for their high biodiversity,
and the East African Great Lakes in particular are renowned for their
endemic cichlid fish adaptive radiations. While comparative phylogenetic
analyses of extant species flocks have revealed patterns and processes
of their diversification, evolutionary trajectories within lineages,
impacts of environmental drivers, or the scope and nature of now-extinct
diversity remain largely unknown. Time-structured paleodata from
geologically young fossil records, such as fossil counts and
particularly ancient DNA data, would help fill this large knowledge gap.
High ambient temperatures can be detrimental to the preservation of DNA,
but refined methodology now allows data generation even from very poorly
preserved samples. Here, we show for the first time that fish fossils
from tropical lake sediments yield endogenous ancient DNA (aDNA).
Despite generally low endogenous content and high sample drop-out,
high-throughput sequencing and in some cases sequence capture allowed
for taxonomic assignment to family or tribe level and phylogenetic
placement of individuals. Even skeletal remains weighing less than 1 mg
and up to 2700 years of age could be phylogenetically placed. We find
that the relationship of degradation of aDNA with the thermal age of
samples is similar to that described for terrestrial samples from cold
environments adjusted for elevated temperatures. Success rates and aDNA
preservation differed between the investigated lakes Chala, Kivu and
Victoria, possibly caused by differences in water oxygenation at
deposition. Our study demonstrates that sediments of tropical lakes
preserve genetic information on rapidly diversifying taxa over time
scales of millennia.