Cytogenetic identification of invasive fish species following connections between hydrographic basins

Author: Bellafronte Elisangela   Moreira-Filho Orlando   Vicari Marcelo   Artoni Roberto   Bertollo Luiz   Margarido Vladimir  

Publisher: Springer Publishing Company

ISSN: 0018-8158

Source: Hydrobiologia, Vol.649, Iss.1, 2010-07, pp. : 347-354

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Abstract

Chromosome analyses were carried out for several fish species in a region impacted by the connection between two hydrographic basins, where a river originally pertaining to the Paraná River basin was transposed to the São Francisco River basin in the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil. The purpose was to assess the dispersal of invasive species from one hydrographic basin to the other and the consequent new geographical distributions of species that had been previously isolated from each other. Species of the families Parodontidae (Apareiodon piracicabae, A. ibitiensis, Parodon hilarii, and P. nasus), Sternopygidae (Eigenmannia virescens), and Gymnotidae (Gymnotus sylvius) were studied. The four species of Parodontidae had 2n = 54 chromosomes, but species-specific karyotype structures, including the presence of the ZZ/ZW sex chromosome system in A. ibitiensis and P. hilarii. Two distinct karyomorphs (A and B) were identified for E. virescens, although with the same diploid number (2n = 38 chromosomes). G. sylvius had 2n = 40 chromosomes. P. hilarii and E. virescens (karyomorph B) are considered to be native to the São Francisco River basin, whereas A. piracicabae, A. ibitiensis, E. virescens (karyomorph A), and G. sylvius are known for the Paraná River basin, and P. nasus is known for the Paraná-Paraguay basin. The presence of the last five species in the São Francisco River basin indicates that they migrated from the Parana River to the São Francisco River basin due to the transposition of the river, and can therefore be considered invasive species in this basin. Moreover, a natural migratory pathway through the former wetland may have affected this dispersal.

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