23 results on '"Neotropical freshwater fishes"'
Search Results
2. A new species of Chrysobrycon Weitzman & Menezes, 1998 (Characiformes, Characidae, Stevardiinae) with remarkable sexually dimorphic pigmentation from the upper Río Vaupés basin, Colombian Amazon, with taxonomic key
- Author
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Vanegas-Rios, James Anyelo, Urbano-Bonilla, Alexander, Sánchez-Garcés, Gian Carlo, and Pensoft Publishers
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Chiribiquete National Natural Park ,cis-Andean basins ,Neotropical freshwater fishes ,sexual dimorphism ,Stevardiini - Published
- 2024
3. A new species of Chrysobrycon Weitzman & Menezes, 1998 (Characiformes, Characidae, Stevardiinae) with remarkable sexually dimorphic pigmentation from the upper Río Vaupés basin, Colombian Amazon, with taxonomic key.
- Author
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Vanegas-Ríos, James Anyelo, Urbano-Bonilla, Alexander, and Sánchez-Garcés, Gian Carlo
- Subjects
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CHARACIFORMES , *CHARACIDAE , *COLOR variation (Biology) , *SEXUAL dimorphism , *SPECIES - Abstract
This study describes Chrysobrycon calamar, a new stevardiine fish from the upper Río Vaupés basin in Colombia. The new species differs from its congeners by the following combined characters: adult males have a dark vertical blotch on the abdominal flanks that is confined to a small area immediately dorsal to the urogenital region and anterior to the third anal-fin ray; adult males with a well-developed vertically humeral blotch, numerous tiny bony hooks on nearly all the upper lobe caudal-fin rays (except C. guahibo, C. hesperus, and C. mojicai), and bony hooks on nearly all branched anal-fin rays (except C. hesperus); the number of vertebrae (43 vs. 38–42); an elongated maxillary anterior process, representing 40% or more of the total length of the bone (vs. with a shorter maxillary anterior process, representing less than 40% of that length); and the posterior portion of the maxilla not reaching the vertical through the anterior border of the eye when the mouth is closed (except from C. yoliae). Additionally, C. calamar differs from C. mojicai by the number of maxillary teeth (2–4 vs. 9–17) and shape of the distal tips of most maxillary teeth (straight along their lengths vs. lateroventrally curved). Remarks on the interspecific color variation associated with sexual dimorphism and other characteristics of the genus are provided. A key to the species of Chrysobrycon is presented. The discovery of C. calamar is a key advance in the understanding of fish biodiversity associated with endemism-rich regions that could be explored after the guerrilla demobilized in Colombia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Taxonomic revision of Sturisoma Swainson, 1838 (Loricariidae: Loricariinae), with descriptions of four new species.
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Londoño‐Burbano, Alejandro and Britto, Marcelo R.
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SPECIES , *SPECIES distribution , *FRESHWATER fishes - Abstract
A taxonomic revision of Sturisoma is presented. Individuals including both type and non‐type specimens of all valid species were examined. Sturisoma was found to comprise 10 valid species: Sturisoma barbatum, Sturisoma brevirostre, Sturisoma graffini, Sturisoma guentheri, Sturisoma lyra, Sturisoma monopelte, Sturisoma nigrirostrum, Sturisoma reisi, Sturisoma rostratum, and Sturisoma tenuirostre. Furthermore, four new species are described: Sturisoma ghazziae, new species, from the Araguaia River, belonging to the Tocantins‐Araguaia basin, Central Brazil; Sturisoma careirensia, new species, from the middle Amazon basin, Brazil; Sturisoma rapppydanielae, new species, from the Purus River, Amazon basin, Brazil; and Sturisoma defranciscoi, new species, from the Putumayo and Solimões rivers, upper Amazon basin, Colombia, and Brazil. Sturisoma robustum is confirmed as synonym of S. barbatum, species registered along the Paraguay/Parana/La Plata River basin in Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay. New records were found for S. nigrirostrum as present in the upper Amazon basin, in the Yavari River, Brazil, in addition to its already known locality, the Ucayali River, Peru. The distribution of the type species of the genus S. rostratum is limited to the lower portion of the Amazon basin in the Araguaia, Maranhão, Mearim, Tapajós, and Tocantins rivers and its affluents, Brazil, in contrast to the assumed widespread distribution across the main basins of South America, as previously proposed for the species; the Mearim River is a new record for the species. Updated diagnoses and descriptions are offered for species of Sturisoma, in addition to distribution maps and an identification key for the species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Past riverine connectivity effects in population structure and distribution of an endemic freshwater fish from northeastern Brazilian rivers: Phylogeographic, taxonomic, and conservation implications.
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Oliveira‐Silva, Leonardo, Batalha‐Filho, Henrique, Camelier, Priscila, and Zanata, Angela M.
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FRESHWATER fishes , *ENDEMIC fishes , *PHYLOGEOGRAPHY , *SPECIES distribution , *MITOCHONDRIAL DNA , *STREAMFLOW , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
The coastal basins of eastern Brazil are influenced by geomorphologic and climatic changes that caused river captures and temporary paleo‐connections due to sea‐level oscillations. These two events can lead to isolation and connection among coastal rivers and have a strong influence on the distribution of freshwater fishes in this region. Characidium bahiense is a small fish species with a wide distribution, ranging from the coastal basins of the North Group of the Northeastern Mata Atlântica ecoregion to São Francisco and Parnaíba ecoregions. The allopatric distribution of C. bahiense associated with the possible morphological and molecular variations among geographically isolated populations stimulated this study.Here, we use an integrative approach, encompassing morphological and mitonuclear data, and paleodrainage reconstruction to better understand the evolutionary history of C. bahiense and to test the putative effects of the current configuration of basins and historical drainage rearrangements on the genetic structuring of the species.Our mitochondrial data show that C. bahiense is not a monophyletic species since the specimens from one locality are more closely related to Characidium cf. lagosantense than to other populations of C. bahiense. Multilocus analyses, however, recovered the monophyly of this species, although the molecular delimitation method considers each mitochondrial DNA lineages as a separated species. Overall, the morphological data revealed some intraspecific overlapping variation, suggesting that all specimens of C. bahiense are conspecific.Molecular analyses combined with geomorphological information suggest that the current distribution of C. bahiense is the result of climate change that directly affected river flow dynamics and recent riverine captures during the Pleistocene.The use of multiple data sources not only provides a more reliable interpretation of the evolutionary history of a species, but can also avoid arbitrary taxonomic decisions. Future phylogeographic studies involving other freshwater fish species with a similar distribution to C. bahiense are necessary to assist in understanding the scenarios presented here. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Molecular species delimitation and description of a new species of Phenacogaster (Teleostei, Characidae) from the southern Amazon basin.
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Souza, Camila S., Mattox, George M. T., Vita, George, Ochoa, Luz E., Melo, Bruno F., and Oliveira, Claudio
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CYTOCHROME oxidase , *CHARACIDAE , *OSTEICHTHYES , *GENETIC variation , *MOLECULAR phylogeny , *SPECIES - Abstract
Phenacogaster is the most species-rich genus of the subfamily Characinae with 23 valid species broadly distributed in riverine systems of South America. Despite the taxonomic diversity of the genus, little has been advanced about its molecular diversity. A recent molecular phylogeny indicated the presence of undescribed species within Phenacogaster that is formally described here. We sampled 73 specimens of Phenacogaster and sequenced the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene in order to undertake species delimitation analyses and evaluate their intra- and interspecific genetic diversity. The results show the presence of 14 species, 13 of which are valid and one undescribed. The new species is known from the tributaries of the Xingu basin, the Rio das Mortes of the Araguaia basin, and the Rio Teles Pires of the Tapajós basin. It is distinguished by the incomplete lateral line, position of the humeral blotch near the pseudotympanum, and shape of the caudal-peduncle blotch. Meristic data and genetic differentiation relative to other Phenacogaster species represent strong evidence for the recognition of the new species and highlight the occurrence of an additional lineage of P. franciscoensis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Ichthyofauna of the ribeirão Sucuri, tributary of rio Tietê, upper rio Paraná basin, southeastern Brazil
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Lais Reia, Gabriel S. da Costa e Silva, James R. Garcia-Ayala, Ana Maria P. F. Vicensotto, and Ricardo C. Benine
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Diversity ,Neotropical freshwater fishes ,Pongaí m ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The ribeirão Sucuri, a tributary of the rio Tietê, and part of the upper rio Paraná basin, is located in the municipality of Pongaí, São Paulo state. The ichthyofauna of ribeirão Sucuri was sampled at nine collection sites in May 2018. Our study captured 408 specimens representing five orders, 11 families, and 35 species. Among the species collected, two have not been previously reported from the rio Tietê basin: Eigenmannia guairaca Peixoto, Dutra & Wosiacki, 2015 and Hoplias misionera Rosso, Mabragaña, González-Castro, Delpiani, Avigliano, Schenone & Días de Astarloa, 2016. Additionally, four species were found that are non-native: Hoplias misionera, Poecilia reticulata Peters, 1859, Roeboides descalvadensis Fowler, 1932, and Satanoperca sp. This study represents the first fish inventory of a tributary on the left margin of the Tietê-Batalha sub-basin and only the second for this portion of the rio Tietê. Our results increase to 55 the number of species recorded from this sub-basin and add data on the putative morphological variation in several species.
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- 2020
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8. Fishes from the Tirimbina Biological Reserve, La Virgen de Sarapiquí, Heredia, Costa Rica.
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Angulo, Arturo, Naranjo-Elizondo, Beatriz, Rojas, Emmanuel, and Ley-López, Juan Manuel
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FISHES , *FISH conservation , *RESEARCH - Abstract
The Tirimbina Biological Reserve (TBR), located in La Virgen de Sarapiquí, Heredia Province, Atlantic versant (Sarapiquí river basin), Costa Rica, is a private wildlife refuge established as "a place of absolute conservation" and for scientific research. An annotated and illustrated catalog of the fish species known to occur within the limits of the TBR, as well as an identification key to and descriptions of all species listed, is presented. A total of 29 species, 23 genera, 9 families and 6 orders were recorded from 13 localities regularly sampled between December 2009 and December 2016. The conservation status of the species and major threats also are briefly discussed. This contribution will serve as a scientific and educational tool to researchers and conservationists, as well as to the public, interested in knowing and working with the fish fauna of the TBR and surrounding areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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9. DNA barcoding reveals taxonomic uncertainty in Salminus (Characiformes).
- Author
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Machado, Carolina De Barros, Ishizuka, Tamylin Kaori, Freitas, PatrÍcia Domingues De, Valiati, Victor Hugo, and Galetti, Pedro Manoel
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GENETIC barcoding , *MIGRATORY fishes , *TAXONOMY , *CHARACIFORMES , *GENETIC polymorphisms - Abstract
Salminus is a genus composed of four species of migratory fishes and top predators. Although this group has great economic and ecological importance, the species level diversity of Salminus is not yet completely clarified. Our goal was to detect if this taxonomic problem is the consequence of lineage divergence within species, and, if so, whether these divergences are sufficient to flag potentially undescribed taxa. We employed the standard DNA barcoding analyses and a generalized mixed Yule-coalescent model (GMYC) using one mitochondrial (COI) marker and Bayesian Inference (BI) reconstruction for one nuclear (RAG2) marker for all currently recognized species of Salminus, sampled across different hydrographic basins. Eight MOTUs (Molecular Operational Taxonomic Units) were determined by distance and model-based analyses, and recovered with BI analyses for COI. Only Salminus affinis and Salminus franciscanus formed monophyletic haplogroups. Salminus brasiliensis and Salminus hilarii had two and four distinct mitochondrial lineages, respectively, and higher intraspecific K2P distances than the adopted optimum threshold. The RAG2 gene tree supported two lineages of S. hilarii (S. hilarii Amazon and S. hilarii Araguaia), while the other mitochondrial lineages of S. hilarii and S. brasiliensis were not supported. All lineages of both species, corresponded to morphological variation described in previous studies. We suggest, based on the DNA barcoding analysis, a new taxonomic scenario and conservation polices for Salminus in the Brazilian territory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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10. A new species of Chrysobrycon ( Characiformes, Characidae, Stevardiinae) from the Amazon River basin in Colombia, with a new diagnostic characteristic for the genus.
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Vanegas‐Ríos, J. A. and Urbano‐Bonilla, A.
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CHARACIFORMES , *FISH morphology , *FRESHWATER fishes ,PARQUE Nacional Natural Amacayacu (Colombia) - Abstract
Chrysobrycon mojicai sp. nov. is described from forest streams that are part of the Amazon River basin in Colombia. It is distinguished from all congeners by having most of the maxillary teeth with distal tips lateroventrally curved ( v. teeth straight along their lengths) and a greater number of dentary teeth (20-27 v. 11-19, except in Chrysobrycon yoliae). The posterior margin of the ventral process of the quadrate does not reach the vertical through the posterior margin of the symplectic and these features differentiate C. mojicai from Chrysobrycon myersi and C. yoliae ( v. posterior margin of ventral process of quadrate reaching vertical through posterior margin of symplectic). In species of Chrysobrycon, the frontals are extensively contacting each other along the midline, resulting in an absent frontal fontanel and a reduced parietal fontanel. This extensive contact between the frontals modifying the fontanels is a condition rarely found within the Stevardiinae and hence is proposed as an additional diagnostic characteristic for the genus. An updated identification key for all Chrysobrycon species is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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11. Geographic distribution and conservation of seasonal killifishes (Cyprinodontiformes, Rivulidae) from the Mid-Northeastern Caatinga ecoregion, northeastern Brazil
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Carla Ferreira Rezende, Diego de Medeiros Bento, Ana Beatriz Alves Bennemann, Lucas Silva de Medeiros, Francisco Keilo Teixeira, Yuri Gomes Abrantes, Sergio M. Q. Lima, and Telton Pedro Anselmo Ramos
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Karstic areas ,Neotropical freshwater fishes ,biology ,Ecology ,National park ,Hypsolebias ,endangered species ,biology.organism_classification ,Rivulidae ,Ecoregion ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Habitat ,temporary habitats ,Conservation status ,Dry lands ,Cynolebias ,Endemism ,São Francisco interbasin water transfer ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The Rivulidae fish family, which includes Neotropical seasonal killifishes, is one of the most diverse taxonomic groups in the aquatic systems of Caatinga in Brazil. Cynolebias and Hypsolebias genera, with 20 and 35 endemic species, respectively, concentrate the greatest diversity of rivulid species in the semiarid. Sixty-eight years after the first records of annual killifishes in the Mid-Northeastern Caatinga ecoregion (MNCE), only four valid species have been sampled in this area. Here we combined bibliographic surveys and recent samplings to investigate the distribution of seasonal rivulids in MNCE. Twenty-one records were obtained, nine of which are new localities, expanding the distribution of three species: Hypsolebias martinsi, H. antenori and Cynolebias microphthalmus. Hypsolebiaslongignatus is still only known from its type locality in Ceará, near the Environmental Protection Area in Pacoti River, and has not been sampled ever since its description in 2008. Among the four species present in MNCE, H. antenori is the only species occurring within the limits of a conservation unit in the Furna Feia National Park. Anthropogenic impacts were observed in most temporary habitats visited, which ranged from river channel to small ponds in cave entrances. All records are found in coastal basins that discharge in the northern coast of the MNCE, in Ceará and Rio Grande do Norte states, which are crucial for the conservation of the Caatinga’s killifishes. The results also evidenced the importance of karstic habitats in the Jandaíra Formation as potential biotopes for seasonal fish in MNCE. This information must be used to update the conservation status of these species and highlight the importance of strategies for preserving the Caatinga’s temporary aquatic habitats, which should be considered for environmental licensing purposes.
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- 2020
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12. Ichthyofauna of the ribeirão Sucuri, tributary of rio Tietê, upper rio Paraná basin, southeastern Brazil
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Ricardo C. Benine, Gabriel S. C. Silva, James R. Garcia-Ayala, Lais Reia, and Ana Maria P. F. Vicensotto
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Hydrology ,geography ,Diversity ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Neotropical freshwater fishes ,Ecology ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Tributary ,Pongaí m ,Structural basin ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The ribeirão Sucuri, a tributary of the rio Tietê, and part of the upper rio Paraná basin, is located in the municipalityof Pongaí, São Paulo state. The ichthyofauna of ribeirão Sucuri was sampled at nine collection sites in May 2018.Our study captured 408 specimens representing five orders, 11 families, and 35 species. Among the species collected,two have not been previously reported from the rio Tietê basin: Eigenmannia guairaca Peixoto, Dutra & Wosiacki,2015 and Hoplias misionera Rosso, Mabragaña, González-Castro, Delpiani, Avigliano, Schenone & Días de Astarloa,2016. Additionally, four species were found that are non-native: Hoplias misionera, Poecilia reticulata Peters, 1859,Roeboides descalvadensis Fowler, 1932, and Satanoperca sp. This study represents the first fish inventory of a tributaryon the left margin of the Tietê-Batalha sub-basin and only the second for this portion of the rio Tietê. Our resultsincrease to 55 the number of species recorded from this sub-basin and add data on the putative morphological variationin several species.
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- 2020
13. Ichthyofauna of the ribeirão Sucuri, tributary of rio Tietê, upper rio Paraná basin, southeastern Brazil
- Author
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Reia, Lais, S. da Costa e Silva, Gabriel, Garcia-Ayala, James R., P. F. Vicensotto, Ana Maria, and Benine, Ricardo C.
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Diversity ,Neotropical freshwater fishes ,Pongaí municipality - Abstract
The ribeirão Sucuri, a tributary of the rio Tietê, and part of the upper rio Paraná basin, is located in the municipality of Pongaí, São Paulo state. The ichthyofauna of ribeirão Sucuri was sampled at nine collection sites in May 2018. Our study captured 408 specimens representing five orders, 11 families, and 35 species. Among the species collected, two have not been previously reported from the rio Tietê basin: Eigenmannia guairaca Peixoto, Dutra & Wosiacki, 2015 and Hoplias misionera Rosso, Mabragaña, González-Castro, Delpiani, Avigliano, Schenone & Días de Astarloa, 2016. Additionally, four species were found that are non-native: Hoplias misionera, Poecilia reticulata Peters, 1859, Roeboides descalvadensis Fowler, 1932, and Satanoperca sp. This study represents the first fish inventory of a tributary on the left margin of the Tietê-Batalha sub-basin and only the second for this portion of the rio Tietê. Our results increase to 55 the number of species recorded from this sub-basin and add data on the putative morphological variation in several species.
- Published
- 2020
14. Two new species and a new subgenus of toothed Brachyhypopomus electric knifefishes (Gymnotiformes, Hypopomidae) from the central Amazon and considerations pertaining to the evolution of a monophasic electric organ discharge.
- Author
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Sullivan, John P., Zuanon, Jansen, and Fernandes, Cristina Cox
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GYMNOTIFORMES , *ELECTRIC organs in insects , *OSTEICHTHYES , *BRANCHIOSTEGALS , *CHROMATOPHORES - Abstract
We describe two new, closely related species of toothed Brachyhypopomus (Hypopomidae: Gymnotiformes: Teleostei) from the central Amazon basin and create a new subgenus for them. Odontohypopomus, new subgenus of Brachyhypopomus, is diagnosed by (1) small teeth present on premaxillae; (2) medialmost two branchiostegal rays thin with blades oriented more vertically than remaining three rays; (3) background color in life (and to lesser extent in preservation) distinctly yellowish with head and sides peppered with small, widely spaced, very dark brown stellate chromatophores that greatly contrast with light background coloration; (4) a dark blotch or bar of subcutaneous pigment below the eye; (5) electric organ discharge waveform of very long duration (head-positive phase approx. 2 milliseconds or longer, head-negative phase shorter or absent) and slow pulse repetition rate (3-16 Hz). The type species of the new subgenus, Brachyhypopomus (Odontohypopomus) walteri sp. n., is diagnosed by the following additional character states: (1) subcutaneous dark pigment at base of orbit particularly prominent, (2) body semi-translucent and nearly bright yellow background coloration in life, (3) a biphasic electric organ discharge (EOD) waveform of very long duration (between 3.5 and 4 milliseconds at 25° C) with head-positive first phase significantly longer than second head-negative phase in both sexes. Brachyhypopomus (Odontohypopomus) bennetti sp. n. is diagnosed by two character states in addition to those used to diagnose the subgenus Odontohypopomus: (1) a deep electric organ, visible as large semi-transparent area, occupying approximately 14-17% body depth directly posterior to the abdominal cavity in combination with a short, but deep, caudal filament, and (2) a monophasic, head-positive EOD waveform, approximately 2.1 milliseconds in duration in both sexes. These are the only described rhamphichthyoid gymnotiforms with oral teeth, and B. bennetti is the first Brachyhypopomus reported to have a monophasic (head-positive) EOD waveform. Unlike biphasic species, the waveform of its EOD is largely unaffected by tail damage from predators. Such injuries are common among specimens in our collections. This species' preference for floating meadow habitat along the major channels of the Amazon River basin may put it at particularly high risk of predation and "tail grazing." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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15. Evolutionary history of the synbranchid eels (Teleostei: Synbranchidae) in Central America and the Caribbean islands inferred from their molecular phylogeny
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Perdices, A., Doadrio, I., and Bermingham, E.
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FRESHWATER animals , *ADENOSINE triphosphatase , *CYTOCHROME b , *MITOCHONDRIAL DNA - Abstract
Abstract: Swamp eels of the genera Synbranchus and Ophisternon are secondary freshwater fishes whose biogeography provides evidence of their long residence in Mesoamerica, while their impoverished species-level taxonomy might suggest a more recent diversification or a conservative morphology. We have inferred the phylogenetic relationships of Synbranchus marmoratus and Ophisternon aenigmaticum from 45 drainages throughout South, Central America, and Cuba based on mitochondrial genes (cytochrome b and ATPase 8/6). Phylogeographic analysis supported the monophyly of Mesoamerican O. aenigmaticum although our results suggest that S. marmoratus is not a monophyletic group. We found a evolutionary differentiated Synbranchus mtDNA lineage inhabiting Las Perlas islands (Pacific Panama) that appeared to be taxonomically distinct and separated for a long period of time from the main Synbranchus clade. Major synbranchid clades were also corroborated with the nuclear RAG-1 gene (1171-bp). Application of two fish-based mtDNA clocks (1.05–1.3% pairwise divergence/million year (Ma)), is in accordance with the Godwanian origin suggested for the Synbranchidae. The mtDNA lineages exhibited a remarkable geographic structure in Central America suggesting that vicariance has most likely promoted the Synbranchus and Ophisternon mtDNA diversification. Although our data indicate the importance of the Pacific area in Synbranchus differentiation, the mtDNA divergence between South and Central American Synbranchus is too small to support Cretaceous colonization via the proto-Antillean bridge suggested by Rosen [Syst. Zool. 24 (1976) 431]. Instead, our phylogeographic results suggest that Ophisternon and Synbranchus mtDNA clades most likely colonized Central America during the Miocene (12.7–23Ma) prior the final closure of the Isthmus of Panama (3.3Ma). [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
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16. Spawning season, ovarian development and fecundity of femaleTrichomycterus corduvense(Osteichthyes, Siluriformes).
- Author
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Marraro, Francisco, Angeles Bistoni, María, and Carranza, Miriam
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SPAWNING , *TRICHOMYCTERIDAE , *CATFISHES , *OSTEICHTHYES , *FISH fertility , *BIOLOGICAL variation - Abstract
We studied female reproductive biology ofTrichomycterus corduvense. The study was carried out in the Anizacate River (Córdoba, Argentina). Samples were collected throughout one year on a monthly basis. Seven oocyte phases were identified. Five ovarian stages were described based on the macroscopic analysis of the oocyte phases. The spawning season for the species ranges from October to February; it was determined based on variations in GSI and the existence of mature females. The dynamics of oocyte development ofT. corduvense, indicated the asynchronism of maturation. The correlation coefficient between fecundity and the individual weight was very low. Therefore, we suggest that this coefficient cannot be used to predictT. corduvensefecundity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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17. Ichthyofauna of the ribeirão sucuri, a tributary of the rio tietê, upper rio paraná basin, southeastern Brazil
- Author
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Reia, Lais [UNESP], Silva, Gabriel S. Costa E. [UNESP], Garcia-Ayala, James R. [UNESP], Vicensotto, Ana Maria P. F. [UNESP], Benine, Ricardo C. [UNESP], and Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)
- Subjects
Diversity ,Neotropical freshwater fishes ,Inventory ,Tietê-Batalha sub-basin - Abstract
Made available in DSpace on 2022-04-29T08:28:55Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2020-01-01 Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) The ribeirão Sucuri, a tributary of the rio Tietê, and part of the upper rio Paraná basin, is located in the municipality of Pongaí, São Paulo state. The ichthyofauna of ribeirão Sucuri was sampled at nine collection sites in May 2018. Our study captured 408 specimens representing five orders, 11 families, and 35 species. Among the species collected, two have not been previously reported from the rio Tietê basin: Eigenmannia guairaca Peixoto, Dutra & Wosiacki, 2015 and Hoplias misionera Rosso, Mabragaña, González-Castro, Delpiani, Avigliano, Schenone & Días de Astarloa, 2016. Additionally, four species were found that are non-native: Hoplias misionera, Poecilia reticulata Peters, 1859, Roeboides descalvadensis Fowler, 1932, and Satanoperca sp. This study represents the first fish inventory of a tributary on the left margin of the Tietê-Batalha sub-basin and only the second for this portion of the rio Tietê. Our results increase to 55 the number of species recorded from this sub-basin and add data on the putative morphological variation in several species. Universidade Estadual Paulista Instituto de Biociências Campus de Botucatu Setor de Zoologia Laboratório de Ictiologia, R. Prof. Dr. Antonio C. W. Zanin, s/n, Rubião Jr Universidade Estadual Paulista Instituto de Biociências Campus de Botucatu Departamento de Biologia Estrutural e Funcional Laboratório de Biologia e Genética de Peixes, R. Prof. Dr. Antonio C. W. Zanin, s/n, Rubião Jr Universidade Estadual Paulista Instituto de Biociências Campus de Botucatu Setor de Zoologia Laboratório de Ictiologia, R. Prof. Dr. Antonio C. W. Zanin, s/n, Rubião Jr Universidade Estadual Paulista Instituto de Biociências Campus de Botucatu Departamento de Biologia Estrutural e Funcional Laboratório de Biologia e Genética de Peixes, R. Prof. Dr. Antonio C. W. Zanin, s/n, Rubião Jr CAPES: 001 CNPq: 153924/2018-7 to JRGA CNPq: 308784/2016-2 to RCB
- Published
- 2020
18. Evolutionary history of the genus Rhamdia (Teleostei: Pimelodidae) in Central America
- Author
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Perdices, Anabel, Bermingham, Eldredge, Montilla, Antonia, and Doadrio, Ignacio
- Subjects
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CATFISHES , *MITOCHONDRIAL DNA , *PHYLOGENY - Abstract
We constructed phylogenetic hypotheses for Mesoamerican Rhamdia, the only genus of primary freshwater fish represented by sympatric species across Central America. Phylogenetic relationships were inferred from analysis of 1990 base pairs (bp) of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), represented by the complete nucleotide sequences of the cytochrome b (cyt b) and the ATP synthase 8 and 6 (ATPase 8/6) genes. We sequenced 120 individuals from 53 drainages to provide a comprehensive geographic picture of Central American Rhamdia systematics and phylogeography. Phylogeographic analysis distinguished multiple Rhamdia mtDNA lineages, and the geographic congruence across evolutionarily independent Rhamdia clades indicated that vicariance has played a strong role in the Mesoamerican diversification of this genus. Phylogenetic analyses of species-level relationships provide strong support for the monophyly of a trans-Andean clade of three evolutionarily equivalent Rhamdia taxa: R. guatemalensis, R. laticauda, and R. cinerascens. Application of fish-based mitochondrial DNA clocks ticking at 1.3–1.5% sequence divergence per million years (Ma), suggests that the split between cis- and trans-Andean Rhamdia extends back about 8 Ma, and the three distinct trans-Andean Rhamdia clades split about 6 Ma ago. Thus the mtDNA divergence observed between cis- and trans-Andean Rhamdia species is too low to support an ancient colonization of Central America in the Late Cretaceous or Paleocene as had been hypothesized in one colonization model for Mesoamerican fishes. Rather the mtDNA data indicate that Rhamdia most likely colonized Central America in the late Miocene or Pliocene, promoting a strong role for the Isthmus of Panama´ in the Mesoamerican expansion of this genus. Basal polytomies suggest that both the R. laticauda and R. guatemalensis clades spread rapidly across the Central American landscape, but differences in the average mtDNA genetic distances among clades comprising the two species, indicate that the R. laticauda spread and diversified across Mesoamerica about 1 million years before R. guatemalensis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Paraphyly and evolutionary independent lineages in Gymnotus pantherinus (Gymnotiformes: Gymnotidae) in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest Coastal Streams.
- Author
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Baroni, Sabrina, Damasceno, Roberta Pacheco, and Almeida-Toledo, Lurdes Foresti de
- Subjects
- *
PHYLOGEOGRAPHY , *BIOGEOGRAPHY , *ELECTRIC fishes , *LAST Glacial Maximum , *FRESHWATER fishes , *ENDEMIC fishes , *PLEISTOCENE Epoch - Abstract
[Display omitted] • Gymnotus pantherinus is a species complex and Gymnotus refugio is nested within it. • Genetic species delimitation supports the species Gymnotus refugio. • Five independent lineages within G. pantherinus were delimited. • Gymnotus pantherinus stricto sensu is delimited with strong support by genetic data. • Diversification of G. pantherinus lineages occurred in the Pleistocene. In the Brazilian Atlantic Forest (AF), many terrestrial species with broad geographical distributions show high diversity and endemism of intraspecific lineages, as revealed by molecular genetic data. This pattern, however, is less explored in freshwater fishes. Gymnotus pantherinus is an electric fish endemic to the Brazilian coastal drainages that shows a wide distribution, ranging from the states of Bahia to Santa Catarina, an unusual pattern for AF fishes. It has been hypothesized that G. pantherinus is a species complex because distinct morphotypes were described for the species based on morphometric and meristic features. We used mitochondrial and nuclear data to test this hypothesis. Based on phylogenetic inference and multi-locus, multispecies coalescent methods, we identified six independent lineages, flagging them as candidate species. One such lineage is the recently described species G. refugio that is nested within G. pantherinus and renders it paraphyletic, showing it is a species complex. We named G. pantherinus stricto sensu the lineage that includes samples from the type locality (Santos, SP). Our results show that genetic lineages correspond only partially and far exceed the number of previously reported morphotypes. Genetic breaks in the group correspond to landscape features associated with the Serra do Mar mountain range and with riverine dynamics caused by sea level changes during the last glacial maximum. Moreover, we found evidence of river capture events affecting phylogeographic structure in the group. We uncovered an important dimension of diversity in the group and encourage further integration of genetic and phenotypic data. Such integration is a fruitful approach not only to reduce the gap between taxonomy and evolutionary history in Gymnotidae, but also to uncover the real AF biodiversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Diversificação e evolução fenotípica em peixes cascudos (Siluriformes: Loricariidae: Loricariinae)
- Author
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Souza, Laura Barreto de Paula, Gouveia, Sidney Feitosa, and Martinez, Pablo Ariel
- Subjects
Neotropical freshwater fishes ,Cascudo (Peixe) ,Diversidade biológica ,Peixes dulcícolas neotropicais ,Non-adaptive radiation ,Peixe de água doce ,Loricariíneos ,Ecologia ,Radiação não adaptativa ,Loricariinae ,Filogenia ,ECOLOGIA [CIENCIAS BIOLOGICAS] ,Macroevolution ,Macroevolução - Abstract
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - CAPES One of the major causes of the phylogenetic, temporal and spatial variation of species richness is attributed to the processes of differential speciation and extinction of lineages, named diversification. There is also a great phenotypic diversity among species that may be related to diversification. The development of phylogenetic comparative methods allowed the study of the diversification and evolution of species traits. The aim of this study is to investigate the pattern of diversification and trait evolution of the suckermouth armored catfish, Loricariinae subfamily, and to investigate if these attributes are related to the diversification rates within the clade. We used a phylogeny containing 114 representatives of subfamily species and their attributes body size, climatic niche and microhabitat (substrate) - position and width for both - to evaluate the evolutionary rates and test the relationship between these different axes of the species niche and their evolutionary rates. We estimated diversification rates with BAMM and performed phylogenetic correlation analyzes (STRAPP) to address the question of whether the attributes are related to the diversification process in the subfamily. We also performed analyzes of disparity through time (DTT) to explore the temporal pattern of phenotypic evolution. The diversification analysis showed that the subfamily had high rates of diversification. Body size presented heterogeneous rates among clades, presenting a shift of diversification in which the specie Paraloricaria agastor had the smallest size of the clade. Climatic niche position presented a heterogeneous pattern of diversification rates, with a shift involving six species of Rineloricaria that retained their niche position. Diversification of the climatic niche width revealed the most heterogeneous pattern, presenting four shifts occurring in clades in which some species possessed greater climatic niche widths. However, the rates of diversification of both micro-habitat position and width did not show any shift. The STRAPP test revealed no correlation between any of the traits studied with diversification, showing that evolutionary process of Loricariinae seems to be independent of the phenotypic attributes investigated. The DTT revealed that in most of the Loricariinae’s evolutionary history, the averages of disparity of the studied attributes evolved under neutral evolution, although they presented peaks of phenotypic disparity within the clades in the most recent time. The results showed that Loricarinae evolved through a non-adaptive radiation where vicariant events would have promoted allopatric speciation and the high diversification rates. In fact, it is known that the radiation of Neotropical fishes was closely related to geological processes of basin formation (hydrogeological hypothesis). DTTs analyzes reinforces this claim, because in most of the evolutionary history the attributes evolved neutrally, without association with diversification, as expected in non-adaptive radiation. Although the subfamily evolved under non-adaptive radiation, divergent selection processes possibly occurred in species independently, promoting significant disparity of attributes within the clades at the present time. The results obtained highlights a peculiar evolutionary history for Loricariinae and a unique known example of nonadaptive radiation for the Neotropics, which can be enlighten the understanding of the yet little known processes that led to the extraordinary diversification of the Neotropical fishes. Uma das causas da variação filogenética, temporal e espacial da riqueza das espécies são atribuídas aos processos de especiação e extinção diferencial das linhagens, chamado de diversificação. Existe também uma grande diversidade fenotípica entre as espécies que pode estar relacionada à diversificação. O desenvolvimento de métodos filogenéticos comparativos permitiu o estudo da diversificação e evolução de atributos das espécies. O objetivo do presente estudo é investigar os padrões de diversificação e evolução de atributos de peixes Cascudos da subfamília Loricariinae, e investigar se esses atributos estão correlacionados com as taxas de diversificação. Foi utilizada uma filogenia contendo 114 representantes de espécies da subfamília e os atributos tamanho corporal, posição e largura de nicho climático de microhábitat (substrato), para avaliar as taxas evolutivas e relação entre esses diferentes eixos do nicho das espécies e as taxas evolutivas da subfamília. As taxas de diversificação da subfamília e dos atributos foram estimadas através do BAMM e foram realizadas análises de correlação filogenética (STRAPP) a fim de detectar se os atributos estão moldando o processo de diversificação na subfamília. Foram realizadas também análises de disparidade ao longo do tempo (DTT) para explorar o padrão temporal de evolução fenotípica. A análise de diversificação mostrou que a subfamília possui altas taxas de diversificação. O tamanho corporal apresentou taxas heterogêneas entre os subclados, apresentando um shift de diversificação no clado em que a espécie Paraloricaria agastor apresentou o menor tamanho do clado. A posição de nicho climático apresentou um padrão heterogêneo de taxas de diversificação, apresentando um shift envolvendo seis espécies de Rineloricaria que conservaram sua posição de nicho. A diversificação da largura de nicho climático revelou o padrão mais heterogêneo, apresentando quatro shifts que ocorreram em clados que contém espécies com maiores larguras de nicho climático. Já as taxas de diversificação da posição e largura de micro-hábitat não apresentaram shifts. Os testes STRAPP revelaram não haver correlação entre nenhum dos atributos considerados no presente estudo e a diversificação, mostrando que o processo evolutivo de Loricariinae parece ser independente dos atributos fenotípicos investigados. O DTT revelou que na maior parte da história evolutiva da subfamília as médias de disparidade dos atributos estudados evoluíram de forma neutra, porém apresentaram picos de disparidade fenotípica dentro dos clados no tempo mais recente. Os resultados mostram que provavelmente os Loricaríneos evoluíram através de uma radiação não adaptativa onde eventos vicariantes teriam promovido especiação alopátrica e as altas taxas de diversificação. De fato, acredita-se que a radiação dos peixes Neotropicais esteve intimamente relacionada aos processos geológicos de formação de bacias (hipótese hidrogeológica). O DTT reforça essa conclusão, pois em boa parte da história evolutiva os atributos evoluíram neutramente, sem associação com a diversificação, como seria esperado em uma radiação não adaptativa. Entretanto, apesar de a subfamília ter evoluído sob radiação não adaptativa, processos de seleção divergente possivelmente ocorreram em espécies independentemente, promovendo disparidade significativa dos atributos dentro dos clados no tempo presente. Os resultados obtidos revelam uma história evolutiva peculiar para os Loricaríneos e um exemplo raro de radiação não adaptativa nos Neotrópicos, que pode elucidar o entendimento dos processos que levaram a extraordinária diversificação dos peixes Neotropicais, ainda pouco conhecidos. São Cristóvão, SE
- Published
- 2018
21. Two new species and a new subgenus of toothed Brachyhypopomus electric knifefishes (Gymnotiformes, Hypopomidae) from the central Amazon and considerations pertaining to the evolution of a monophasic electric organ discharge
- Author
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AlessanRSS Reis, Cristina Fernandes, Jansen Zuanon, and John P. Sullivan
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,animal structures ,weakly electric fish ,010607 zoology ,Brachyhypopomus ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Gymnotiform ,electric organ discharge ,EOD ,lcsh:Zoology ,evolution ,Brachyhypopomus bennetti ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Electric fish ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Teleostei ,Neotropical freshwater fishes ,biology ,electric organ ,Gymnotiformes ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,Type species ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Hypopomidae ,Subgenus - Abstract
We describe two new, closely related species of toothed Brachyhypopomus (Hypopomidae: Gymnotiformes: Teleostei) from the central Amazon basin and create a new subgenus for them. Odontohypopomus, new subgenus of Brachyhypopomus, is diagnosed by (1) small teeth present on premaxillae; (2) medialmost two branchiostegal rays thin with blades oriented more vertically than remaining three rays; (3) background color in life (and to lesser extent in preservation) distinctly yellowish with head and sides peppered with small, widely spaced, very dark brown stellate chromatophores that greatly contrast with light background coloration; (4) a dark blotch or bar of subcutaneous pigment below the eye; (5) electric organ discharge waveform of very long duration (head-positive phase approx. 2 milliseconds or longer, head-negative phase shorter or absent) and slow pulse repetition rate (3–16 Hz). The type species of the new subgenus, Brachyhypopomus (Odontohypopomus) walteri sp. n., is diagnosed by the following additional character states: (1) subcutaneous dark pigment at base of orbit particularly prominent, (2) body semi-translucent and nearly bright yellow background coloration in life, (3) a biphasic electric organ discharge (EOD) waveform of very long duration (between 3.5 and 4 milliseconds at 25° C) with head-positive first phase significantly longer than second head-negative phase in both sexes. Brachyhypopomus (Odontohypopomus) bennetti sp. n. is diagnosed by two character states in addition to those used to diagnose the subgenus Odontohypopomus: (1) a deep electric organ, visible as large semi-transparent area, occupying approximately 14–17% body depth directly posterior to the abdominal cavity in combination with a short, but deep, caudal filament, and (2) a monophasic, head-positive EOD waveform, approximately 2.1 milliseconds in duration in both sexes. These are the only described rhamphichthyoid gymnotiforms with oral teeth, and B. bennetti is the first Brachyhypopomus reported to have a monophasic (head-positive) EOD waveform. Unlike biphasic species, the waveform of its EOD is largely unaffected by tail damage from predators. Such injuries are common among specimens in our collections. This species’ preference for floating meadow habitat along the major channels of the Amazon River basin may put it at particularly high risk of predation and “tail grazing.”
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- 2013
22. Evolutionary history of the genus Rhamdia (Teleostei: Pimelodidae) in Central America
- Author
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Ignacio Doadrio, Antonia Montilla, Eldredge Bermingham, Anabel Perdices, Programa Iberoamericano de Ciencia y Tecnología para el Desarrollo, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (Argentina), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), Smithsonian Institution, and Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (España)
- Subjects
Systematics ,Time Factors ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Cytochrome b ,Rhamdia ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Heptapteridae ,Evolution, Molecular ,Monophyly ,Genetics ,Vicariance ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Phylogeny ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Catfishes ,Molecular systematics ,Neotropical freshwater fishes ,Geography ,biology ,Ecology ,Fishes ,Central America ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Mitochondrial Proton-Translocating ATPases ,Cytochrome b Group ,biology.organism_classification ,Mitochondrial DNA ,Phylogeography ,Evolutionary biology ,Molecular phylogenetics ,ATP synthase - Abstract
We constructed phylogenetic hypotheses for Mesoamerican Rhamdia, the only genus of primary freshwater fish represented by sympatric species across Central America. Phylogenetic relationships were inferred from analysis of 1990 base pairs (bp) of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), represented by the complete nucleotide sequences of the cytochrome b (cyt b) and the ATP synthase 8 and 6 (ATPase 8/6) genes. We sequenced 120 individuals from 53 drainages to provide a comprehensive geographic picture of Central American Rhamdia systematics and phylogeography. Phylogeographic analysis distinguished multiple Rhamdia mtDNA lineages, and the geographic congruence across evolutionarily independent Rhamdia clades indicated that vicariance has played a strong role in the Mesoamerican diversification of this genus. Phylogenetic analyses of species-level relationships provide strong support for the monophyly of a trans-Andean clade of three evolutionarily equivalent Rhamdia taxa: R. guatemalensis, R. laticauda, and R. cinerascens. Application of fish-based mitochondrial DNA clocks ticking at 1.3-1.5% sequence divergence per million years (Ma), suggests that the split between cis- and trans-Andean Rhamdia extends back about 8 Ma, and the three distinct trans-Andean Rhamdia clades split about 6 Ma ago. Thus the mtDNA divergence observed between cis- and trans-Andean Rhamdia species is too low to support an ancient colonization of Central America in the Late Cretaceous or Paleocene as had been hypothesized in one colonization model for Mesoamerican fishes. Rather the mtDNA data indicate that Rhamdia most likely colonized Central America in the late Miocene or Pliocene, promoting a strong role for the Isthmus of Panamá in the Mesoamerican expansion of this genus. Basal polytomies suggest that both the R. laticauda and R. guatemalensis clades spread rapidly across the Central American landscape, but differences in the average mtDNA genetic distances among clades comprising the two species, indicate that the R. laticauda spread and diversified across Mesoamerica about 1 million years before R. guatemalensis., Our collecting expeditions were funded by the US–Spain Science and Technology program, a National Geographic Society grant to A. Martin (currently an Assistant Professor at UC-Boulder), CONACYT-CSIC, and the Smithsonian Institution (Scholarly Studies, BIOLAT and the Abbott Restricted Endowment). The Smithsonian Institution's Scholarly Studies and Molecular Systematics programs supported the laboratory portion of our research. A.P. was sponsored by a postdoctoral MECD grant from the Spanish government.
- Published
- 2002
23. Evolutionary history of the genus Rhamdia (Teleostei: Pimelodidae) in Central America
- Author
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Programa Iberoamericano de Ciencia y Tecnología para el Desarrollo, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (Argentina), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), Smithsonian Institution, Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (España), Perdices, Anabel, Bermingham, Eldredge, Montilla, Antonia, Doadrio, Ignacio, Programa Iberoamericano de Ciencia y Tecnología para el Desarrollo, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (Argentina), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), Smithsonian Institution, Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (España), Perdices, Anabel, Bermingham, Eldredge, Montilla, Antonia, and Doadrio, Ignacio
- Abstract
We constructed phylogenetic hypotheses for Mesoamerican Rhamdia, the only genus of primary freshwater fish represented by sympatric species across Central America. Phylogenetic relationships were inferred from analysis of 1990 base pairs (bp) of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), represented by the complete nucleotide sequences of the cytochrome b (cyt b) and the ATP synthase 8 and 6 (ATPase 8/6) genes. We sequenced 120 individuals from 53 drainages to provide a comprehensive geographic picture of Central American Rhamdia systematics and phylogeography. Phylogeographic analysis distinguished multiple Rhamdia mtDNA lineages, and the geographic congruence across evolutionarily independent Rhamdia clades indicated that vicariance has played a strong role in the Mesoamerican diversification of this genus. Phylogenetic analyses of species-level relationships provide strong support for the monophyly of a trans-Andean clade of three evolutionarily equivalent Rhamdia taxa: R. guatemalensis, R. laticauda, and R. cinerascens. Application of fish-based mitochondrial DNA clocks ticking at 1.3-1.5% sequence divergence per million years (Ma), suggests that the split between cis- and trans-Andean Rhamdia extends back about 8 Ma, and the three distinct trans-Andean Rhamdia clades split about 6 Ma ago. Thus the mtDNA divergence observed between cis- and trans-Andean Rhamdia species is too low to support an ancient colonization of Central America in the Late Cretaceous or Paleocene as had been hypothesized in one colonization model for Mesoamerican fishes. Rather the mtDNA data indicate that Rhamdia most likely colonized Central America in the late Miocene or Pliocene, promoting a strong role for the Isthmus of Panamá in the Mesoamerican expansion of this genus. Basal polytomies suggest that both the R. laticauda and R. guatemalensis clades spread rapidly across the Central American landscape, but differences in the average mtDNA genetic distances among clades comprising the two species, ind
- Published
- 2002
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