| dc.description.abstract | Morphological divergence was evident among three sympatric morphs of Arctic  charr (Salvelinus alpinus (L.)) that are ecologically diverged along the shallow-,  deep-water resource axis in a subarctic postglacial lake (Norway). The two  deep-water (profundal) spawning morphs, a benthivore (PB-morph) and a  piscivore (PP-morph), have evolved under identical abiotic conditions with  constant low light and temperature levels in their deep-water habitat, and were  morphologically most similar. However, they differed in important head traits  (e.g., eye and mouth size) related to their different diet specializations. The  small-sized PB-morph had a paedomorphic appearance with a blunt head  shape, large eyes, and a deep body shape adapted to their profundal lifestyle  feeding on submerged benthos from soft, deep-water sediments. The PP-morph  had a robust head, large mouth with numerous teeth, and an elongated body  shape strongly related to their piscivorous behavior. The littoral spawning  omnivore morph (LO-morph) predominantly utilizes the shallow benthic–  pelagic habitat and food resources. Compared to the deep-water morphs, the  LO-morph had smaller head relative to body size. The LO-morph exhibited  traits typical for both shallow-water benthic feeding (e.g., large body depths  and small eyes) and planktivorous feeding in the pelagic habitat (e.g., streamlined  body shape and small mouth). The development of morphological differences  within the same deep-water habitat for the PB- and PP-morphs  highlights the potential of biotic factors and ecological interactions to promote  further divergence in the evolution of polymorphism in a tentative incipient  speciation process. The diversity of deep-water charr in this study represents a  novelty in the Arctic charr polymorphism as a truly deep-water piscivore  morph has to our knowledge not been described elsewhere.  Geometric morphometrics, incipient  speciation, phenotypic diversity, profundal  piscivore, resource polymorphism, salmonid | en_US |