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Title: | A molecular phylogeny of the freshwater fish genus Rasbora (Teleostei: Cyprinidae) in Sri Lanka reveals a remarkable diversification and a cryptic species |
Authors: | Sudasinghe, Hiranya Pethiyagoda, Rohan Ranasinghe, Ranasinghe Hettiarachchige Tharindu Raghavan, Rajeev DAHANUKAR, NEELESH Meegaskumbura, Madhava Dept. of Biology |
Keywords: | Cryptic species Diversification Freshwater fish India Species delimitation TOC-AUG-2020 2020 2020-AUG-WEEK2 |
Issue Date: | Nov-2020 |
Publisher: | Wiley |
Citation: | Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research, 58(4), 1076-1110. |
Abstract: | The diversity of the freshwater†fish genus Rasbora (Cyprinidae) on Sri Lanka (five species) is high compared with the four species reported from the peninsula of India, from which the island's cyprinid fauna is derived. The paucity of characters by which species of Rasbora can be phenotypically distinguished renders field identification difficult, adversely affecting the estimation of populations and distributions, with consequences for conservation and management, increasing also the risk of taxonomic inflation. From a sampling of 90 sites across Sri Lanka and based on phylogenetic and haplotype analyses of sequences of cox1 and cytb mitochondrial, and rag1 and irbp nuclear markers, we review the species diversity and phylogeography of Rasbora on the island. Molecular analyses recover, in addition to the five species previously reported, a new (cryptic) species: Rasbora adisi sp. nov. Uncorrected pairwise cox1 genetic distances between species range from 2.0 to 12.3 percent. The Sri Lankan diversification derives from a common ancestor which arrived from India during a sea†level low†stand in the mid†Miocene (15.1 Ma [95% HPD: 11.5–19.8 Ma]), when the present†day island was subaerially connected to the Indian subcontinent by a broad isthmus. This gave rise to a clade comprising five species—R. adisi sp. nov., Rasbora armitagei, Rasbora microcephalus, Rasbora naggsi and Rasbora wilpita—with a crown age of 9.9 Ma (95% HPD: 7.1–13.3 Ma) and to a clade comprising Indian and Sri Lankan populations of Rasbora dandia, which themselves are reciprocally monophyletic. Morphological analysis of 334 specimens discriminates between most species which, however, are most reliably diagnosed by chromatic characters. The four endemic species exhibit a pattern of inter†basin dispersal via headwater capture, followed by vicariance, explaining the high diversity of the genus on the island. |
URI: | http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4958 https://doi.org/10.1111/jzs.12395 |
ISSN: | 0947-5745 1439-0469 |
Appears in Collections: | JOURNAL ARTICLES |
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