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1.
J Fish Biol ; 101(5): 1262-1269, 2022 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36054119

ABSTRACT

Otolith shape is widely used as a taxonomic feature in fish systematics. In Siluriformes, the lapillus otolith is the most relevant character for taxonomic purposes, although its discriminant potential has not been assessed quantitatively. Our study model were sea catfishes of the family Ariidae from the north-eastern Pacific as representatives of Siluriformes, a taxon with increased taxonomic complexity. The lapillus otolith shape obtained by geometric morphometrics showed high discrimination potential both at the genus and species levels with an overall classification accuracy of c. 93% (K = 0.92). Due to the strong species delimitation exhibited by lapillus otolith shape, the descriptions and identification keys provided here are the most useful materials to recognize the eight sea catfish species evaluated. The shared similarities in lapillus otolith shape among species seem to be more influenced by phylogenetic relationships than other factors such as habitat. The lapillus otolith shape is the most powerful taxonomic feature discovered so far for the identification of sea catfishes from the north-eastern Pacific.


Subject(s)
Catfishes , Animals , Phylogeny , Otolithic Membrane , Ecosystem
2.
Mol Biol Rep ; 48(10): 7007-7012, 2021 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34426903

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Octopus hubbsorum Berry, 1953 is the most important species for commercial fishing in the Mexican Pacific. However, there is a lack of information regarding population structure that could have important management implications. We tested 44 microsatellite loci in O. hubbsorum by cross-amplification from O. bimaculatus. METHODS AND RESULTS: Genetic diversity and structure was tested over 30 octopus sampled from Santa Cruz de Miramar (Nayarit, México). A total of 11 loci were successfully amplified. All loci were polymorphic with the number of effective alleles ranging from 2.13 to 23.14, while three loci significantly deviated from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. No significant LD was observed between pairs of loci (P ≥ 0.05). The application of the new markers in a O. hubbsorum population from Santa Cruz de Miramar Nayarit, México, did not showed Wahlund or isolate breaking effects due to the mixing of distinct populations. CONCLUSIONS: The loci were useful to estimate levels of pairwise relatedness and to discard the presence of recent demographic bottlenecks in the population. We consider that eight microsatellites are adequate from the 11 amplified loci.


Subject(s)
Genetic Variation , Microsatellite Repeats/genetics , Octopodiformes/genetics , Animals , Geography , Mexico
3.
Mitochondrial DNA A DNA Mapp Seq Anal ; 32(5-8): 195-201, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37846725

ABSTRACT

The chilhuil sea catfish (Bagre panamensis) is an ecologically relevant species contributing to the structure, organization, and functioning of the ecosystems it inhabits. Also, it is an important artisanal fishery resource in the Mexican Pacific coast. This study aimed to determine the genetic diversity, population structure, and historical demography of B. panamensis in the Mexican Pacific. The mitochondrial DNA was amplified from two distinct regions, r16S and COI, resulting in an 1142 bp of the concatenated genes. Low genetic diversity levels were detected for r16S (H = 12; h = 0.131; π = 0.0003) and high genetic diversity levels for COI (H = 57; h = 0.9128; π = 0.0039) and the concatenated gene fragments (H = 62; h = 0.9307; π = 0.0023). Population structure analysis indicated 'panmixia' for B. panamensis along the Mexican Pacific. Furthermore, historical demographic analysis (Tajima's D, Fu's Fs, mismatch distribution, and Bayesian Skyline plot analyses) supported a population expansion scenario for the studied species.

4.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 154: 106968, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33031931

ABSTRACT

The biogeography of American loliginid squids has been improved in recent years, but certain key taxa have been missing. Given that the most accurate phylogenies and estimates of divergence times of common ancestors depend heavily on good taxonomic coverage we have reanalyzed the genus Lolliguncula in light of new samples that increase the geographic and taxonomic coverage. New sequences were produced using standard methods to update an existing dataset for COI, 16S and Rhodopsin markers. Data was analyzed using various species delimitation methods, rigorous phylogenetic analyses and estimates of divergence times between clades. Within Lolliguncula we recover five monophyletic lineages that relate to the known species L. argus, L. diomedeae, L. panamensis, L. brevis North Atlantic and L. brevis South Atlantic. Except when using low divergence thresholds in ABGD, species delimitation methods only identify four of these lineages as distinct species, grouping L. argus and L. diomedeae as a single species. However, considering the reciprocal monophyly, recent divergence time estimate and morphological diagnoses we refrain from synonymizing L. argus within L. diomedeae, considering them very recently diverged species. The biogeography of the American loliginids is discussed, wherein basal cladogenesis in both Lolliguncula and Doryteuthis occur between the Atlantic and Pacific about 45 mya, with subsequent speciation around 20 mya associated with seafloor changes during the formation of the Caribbean. The recent speciation between L. argus and L. diomedeae is associated to oceanic environmental changes associated with glaciation, deep sea cooling and tropical upwelling.


Subject(s)
Decapodiformes/classification , Phylogeny , Phylogeography , Animals , Caribbean Region , Oceans and Seas , Species Specificity , Time Factors
5.
PeerJ ; 7: e8118, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31803534

ABSTRACT

Species of the genus Octopus from the northeastern Pacific are ecologically and economically important; however, their taxonomy is confusing and has not been comprehensively assessed. In this study, we performed a taxonomic evaluation of these species considering the morphological characteristics of the original descriptions, a molecular analysis of partial COI-gene sequences, and a traditional morphometry analysis of nine body measurements. Several interesting findings were obtained with our results: for instance, we updated the diagnoses of some species by including characters such as the number of lamellae per demibranch and the presence of chromatophores in the visceral sac; we deposited partial COI-gene sequences of species that had not been incorporated into the GenBank repository; and according to the morphometric analysis, we confirmed that the lengths of arms I-IV are relevant to discriminate the species under study. The taxa evaluated were morphologically, molecularly and morphometrically well-delimited; however, features such as funnel organ shape and arm length proportions in regard to dorsal mantle length are either not included in the diagnosis of the genus Octopus or overlap with other genera. Hence, this information, combined with the results obtained from the molecular analysis, supports the generic re-assignation of two of the species evaluated.

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