Figure 1From: Genomic signatures of relaxed disruptive selection associated with speciation reversal in whitefishGeographic locations of the species flocks studied within Switzerland. Map showing the number of species included, their sampling location and their representative phenotypes (species names listed from above to below). (A) Lake Neuchâtel: (C. palaea, C. candidus), (B) Lake Biel: (C. palaea, C. confusus), (C) Lake Thun: (C. alpinus, C. sp. “balchen”, C. fatioi, C. sp. “felchen”, C. albellus), (D) Lake Brienz: (C. sp. “balchen”, C. sp. “felchen”, C. albellus), (E) Lake Lucerne: (C. sp. “bodenbalchen”, C. zugensis, C. nobilis), (F) Lake Zuerich: (C. duplex, C. heglingus), (G) Lake Walen: (C. duplex, C. heglingus), (H) Lake Constance: (C. sp. “weissfelchen”, C. arenicolus, C. sp. “Alpenrhein”, C. macrophthalmus, C. wartmanni), (I) Lake Maggiore: (C. sp. “lavarello”, C. sp. “bondella”). Yellow circles denote native species flocks. Red circle denotes anthropogenic origin and secondary contact.Back to article page