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Fish Faunas of the African Great Lakes: Origins, Diversity, and Vulnerability
Authors:Rosemary H Lowe-McConnell
Institution:c/o Fish Section British Museum (Natural History) Cromwell Road London SW7 5BD, United Kingdom
Abstract:The largest African Great Lakes, Tanganyika, Malawi, and Victoria, which have the richest lacustrine fish faunas of any of the world's lakes, provide a unique comparative series for studies of evolutionary mechanisms, community ecology, and fish behavior. Their colorful littoral fishes are also known to aquarists worldwide. This paper examines the origins of their fish diversity, looking at the history of the lakes, colonization from river systems, and evolution of endemic faunas within each lake. All three lakes support fisheries of great socioeconomic importance for the rapidly rising human populations. The paper also examines the vulnerability of the faunas to fishing pressures and introductions of exotic species. In Malawi and Victoria, bottom-trawling has altered the cichlid species composition. The loss of an estimated 200 taxa of endemic cichlid species from Lake Victoria's fauna, following introductions of exotic fishes (tilapias and predatory centropomid Lates ) 40 years ago, stresses the need to protect the unique fish faunas in Lakes Tanganyika and Malawi.
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