Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/17557
Título: Evolutionary divergence among oligosarcus spp. (Ostariophysi, Characidae) from the São Francisco and Doce River Basins: Oligosarcus solitarius Menezes, 1987 shows the highest rates of chromosomal evolution in the Neotropical Region
Autor: Barros, Lucas Caetano de
Santos, Udson
Cioffi, Marcelo de Bello
Dergam, Jorge Abdala S.
Palavras-chave: Characidae
Oligosarcus
Oligosarcus Sp.
Ostariophysi
Pisces
Animals
Characidae
Chromosome
Genetics
Evolution, Molecular
Animal
Characidae
Chromosomes
Evolution, Molecular
Data do documento: 2015
Revista: Zebrafish
É parte de: Volume 12, Número 1, Pags. 102-110
Abstract: The Doce River, in southeastern Brazil, is a coastal drainage, configured since the Late Cretaceous, when South America separated from Africa. Of the 77 native fish species of the Doce River Basin, 37 are potentially endangered - Oligosarcus solitarius, Menezes 1987, is the only endemic species of the quaternary lakes in the middle portion of this drainage and Oligosarcus argenteus, Günther 1864, is distributed in the Doce River channel and headwaters. This study characterizes the morphological, cytogenetic, and mitochondrial DNA variation in the Oligosarcus spp. populations from the Doce and São Francisco River Basins. The principal component analysis indicates three morphological groups. Cytogenetic data corroborate existence of the O. solitarius and O. argenteus fish species in the Doce River Basin, with high levels of population cytogenetic polymorphism. Taking into consideration the Pleistocene-Holocene formation of the lacustrine system in the middle Doce River, with low molecular differentiation and high levels of chromosomal variation among the O. solitarius populations, we concluded that O. solitarius has the highest rate of chromosomal evolution observed in Neotropical freshwater fishes. The morphological and cytogenetic patterns of the Oligosarcus sp. population collected at the Das Velhas River headwaters suggest that it may represent an undescribed species. © Copyright 2015, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. 2015.
DOI: 10.1089/zeb.2014.1030
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