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1.
Mol Ecol ; 32(7): 1656-1672, 2023 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36560895

RESUMO

Coral reef fishes are diverse in ecology and behaviour and show remarkable colour variability. Investigating the visual pigment gene (opsin) expression in these fishes makes it possible to associate their visual genotype and phenotype (spectral sensitivities) to visual tasks, such as feeding strategy or conspecific detection. By studying all major damselfish clades (Pomacentridae) and representatives from five other coral reef fish families, we show that the long-wavelength-sensitive (lws) opsin is highly expressed in algivorous and less or not expressed in zooplanktivorous species. Lws is also upregulated in species with orange/red colours (reflectance >520 nm) and expression is highest in orange/red-coloured algivores. Visual models from the perspective of a typical damselfish indicate that sensitivity to longer wavelengths does enhance the ability to detect the red to far-red component of algae and orange/red-coloured conspecifics, possibly enabling social signalling. Character state reconstructions indicate that in the early evolutionary history of damselfishes, there was no lws expression and no orange/red coloration. Omnivory was most often the dominant state. Although herbivory was sometimes dominant, zooplanktivory was never dominant. Sensitivity to long wavelength (increased lws expression) only emerged in association with algivory but never with zooplanktivory. Higher lws expression is also exploited by social signalling in orange/red, which emerged after the transition to algivory. Although the relative timing of traits may deviate by different reconstructions and alternative explanations are possible, our results are consistent with sensory bias whereby social signals evolve as a correlated response to natural selection on sensory system properties in other contexts.


Assuntos
Recifes de Corais , Peixes , Animais , Peixes/genética , Opsinas/genética , Opsinas/metabolismo , Expressão Gênica , Comunicação
2.
Proc Biol Sci ; 289(1980): 20221020, 2022 08 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35946161

RESUMO

Quaternary climate fluctuations can affect speciation in regional biodiversity assembly in two non-mutually exclusive ways: a glacial species pump, where isolation in glacial refugia accelerates allopatric speciation, and adaptive radiation in underused adaptive zones during ice-free periods. We detected biogeographic and genetic signatures associated with both mechanisms in the assembly of the biota of the European Alps. Age distributions of endemic and widespread species within aquatic and terrestrial taxa (amphipods, fishes, amphibians, butterflies and flowering plants) revealed that endemic fish evolved only in lakes, are highly sympatric, and mainly of Holocene age, consistent with adaptive radiation. Endemic amphipods are ancient, suggesting preglacial radiation with limited range expansion and local Pleistocene survival, perhaps facilitated by a groundwater-dwelling lifestyle. Terrestrial endemics are mostly of Pleistocene age and are thus more consistent with the glacial species pump. The lack of evidence for Holocene adaptive radiation in the terrestrial biome is consistent with faster recolonization through range expansion of these taxa after glacial retreats. More stable and less seasonal ecological conditions in lakes during the Holocene may also have contributed to Holocene speciation in lakes. The high proportion of young, endemic species makes the Alpine biota vulnerable to climate change, but the mechanisms and consequences of species loss will likely differ between biomes because of their distinct evolutionary histories.


Assuntos
Borboletas , Emigração e Imigração , Animais , Biodiversidade , Ecossistema , Peixes , Especiação Genética , Filogenia , Refúgio de Vida Selvagem
3.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 145: 106711, 2020 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31857199

RESUMO

With 149 currently recognized species, Hypostomus is one of the most species-rich catfish genera in the world, widely distributed over most of the Neotropical region. To clarify the evolutionary history of this genus, we reconstructed a comprehensive phylogeny of Hypostomus based on four nuclear and two mitochondrial markers. A total of 206 specimens collected from the main Neotropical rivers were included in the present study. Combining morphology and a Bayesian multispecies coalescent (MSC) approach, we recovered 85 previously recognized species plus 23 putative new species, organized into 118 'clusters'. We presented the Cluster Credibility (CC) index that provides numerical support for every hypothesis of cluster delimitation, facilitating delimitation decisions. We then examined the correspondence between the morphologically identified species and their inter-specific COI barcode pairwise divergence. The mean COI barcode divergence between morphological sisters species was 1.3 ± 1.2%, and only in 11% of the comparisons the divergence was ≥2%. This indicates that the COI barcode threshold of 2% classically used to delimit fish species would seriously underestimate the number of species in Hypostomus, advocating for a taxon-specific COI-based inter-specific divergence threshold to be used only when approximations of species richness are needed. The phylogeny of the 108 Hypostomus species, together with 35 additional outgroup species, confirms the monophyly of the genus. Four well-supported main lineages were retrieved, hereinafter called super-groups: Hypostomus cochliodon, H. hemiurus, H. auroguttatus, and H. plecostomus super-groups. We present a compilation of diagnostic characters for each super-group. Our phylogeny lays the foundation for future studies on biogeography and on macroevolution to better understand the successful radiation of this Neotropical fish genus.


Assuntos
Peixes-Gato/classificação , Evolução Molecular , Animais , Teorema de Bayes , Peixes-Gato/genética , Código de Barras de DNA Taxonômico , Complexo IV da Cadeia de Transporte de Elétrons/genética , Proteínas de Membrana/genética , Mitocôndrias/genética , Proteínas do Tecido Nervoso/genética , Filogenia , Especificidade da Espécie
4.
Ecol Evol ; 14(4): e11186, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38628922

RESUMO

Damselfishes (Pomacentridae) are one of the most behaviourally diverse, colourful and species-rich reef fish families. One remarkable characteristic of damselfishes is their communication in ultraviolet (UV) light. Not only are they sensitive to UV, they are also prone to have UV-reflective colours and patterns enabling social signalling. Using more than 50 species, we aimed to uncover the evolutionary history of UV colour and UV vision in damselfishes. All damselfishes had UV-transmitting lenses, expressed the UV-sensitive SWS1 opsin gene, and most displayed UV-reflective patterns and colours. We find evidence for several tuning events across the radiation, and while SWS1 gene duplications are generally very rare among teleosts, our phylogenetic reconstructions uncovered two independent duplication events: one close to the base of the most species-rich clade in the subfamily Pomacentrinae, and one in a single Chromis species. Using amino acid comparisons, we found that known spectral tuning sites were altered several times in parallel across the damselfish radiation (through sequence change and duplication followed by sequence change), causing repeated shifts in peak spectral absorbance of around 10 nm. Pomacentrinae damselfishes expressed either one or both copies of SWS1, likely to further finetune UV-signal detection and differentiation. This highly advanced and modified UV vision among damselfishes, in particular the duplication of SWS1 among Pomacentrinae, might be seen as a key evolutionary innovation that facilitated the evolution of the exuberant variety of UV-reflectance traits and the diversification of this coral reef fish lineage.

5.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 5073, 2021 03 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33658600

RESUMO

Distribution history of the widespread Neotropical genus Hypostomus was studied to shed light on the processes that shaped species diversity. We inferred a calibrated phylogeny, ancestral habitat preference, ancestral areas distribution, and the history of dispersal and vicariance events of this genus. The phylogenetic and distribution analyses indicate that Hypostomus species inhabiting La Plata Basin do not form a monophyletic clade, suggesting that several unrelated ancestral species colonized this basin in the Miocene. Dispersal to other rivers of La Plata Basin started about 8 Mya, followed by habitat shifts and an increased rate of cladogenesis. Amazonian Hypostomus species colonized La Plata Basin several times in the Middle Miocene, probably via the Upper Paraná and the Paraguay rivers that acted as dispersal corridors. During the Miocene, La Plata Basin experienced marine incursions, and geomorphological and climatic changes that reconfigured its drainage pattern, driving dispersal and diversification of Hypostomus. The Miocene marine incursion was a strong barrier and its retraction triggered Hypostomus dispersal, increased speciation rate and ecological diversification. The timing of hydrogeological changes in La Plata Basin coincides well with Hypostomus cladogenetic events, indicating that the history of this basin has acted on the diversification of its biota.

6.
Ecol Evol ; 11(11): 6119-6132, 2021 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34141207

RESUMO

The distribution of genetic diversity across a species distribution range is rarely homogeneous, as the genetic structure among populations is related to the degree of isolation among them, such as isolation by distance, isolation by barrier, and isolation by environment. Jenynsia lineata is a small viviparous fish that inhabits a wide range of habitats in South America. To decipher the isolation processes that drive population structuring in J. lineata, we analyzed 221 sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase I gene (COI), from 19 localities. Then, we examined the influence of the three most common types of isolation in order to explain the genetic variation found in this species.Our results revealed a marked structuration, with three groups: (a) La Plata/Desaguadero Rivers (sampling sites across Argentina, Uruguay, and Southern Brazil), (b) Central Argentina, and (c) Northern Argentina. A distance-based redundancy analysis, including the explanatory variables geographical distances, altitude, latitude, and basin, was able to explain up to 65% of the genetic structure. A variance partitioning analysis showed that the two most important variables underlying the structuration in J. lineata were altitude (isolation by environment) and type of basin (isolation by barrier).Our results show that in this species, the processes of population diversification are complex and are not limited to a single mechanism. The processes that play a prominent role in this study could explain the high rate of diversity that characterizes freshwater fish species. And these processes in turn are the basis for possible speciation events.

7.
PLoS One ; 12(12): e0189349, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29261722

RESUMO

Understanding the processes that drive population genetic divergence in the Amazon is challenging because of the vast scale, the environmental richness and the outstanding biodiversity of the region. We addressed this issue by determining the genetic structure of the widespread Amazonian common sardine fish Triportheus albus (Characidae). We then examined the influence, on this species, of all previously proposed population-structuring factors, including isolation-by-distance, isolation-by-barrier (the Teotônio Falls) and isolation-by-environment using variables that describe floodplain and water characteristics. The population genetics analyses revealed an unusually strong structure with three geographical groups: Negro/Tapajós rivers, Lower Madeira/Central Amazon, and Upper Madeira. Distance-based redundancy analyses showed that the optimal model for explaining the extreme genetic structure contains all proposed structuring factors and accounts for up to 70% of the genetic structure. We further quantified the contribution of each factor via a variance-partitioning analysis. Our results demonstrate that multiple factors, often proposed as individual drivers of population divergence, have acted in conjunction to divide T. albus into three genetic lineages. Because the conjunction of multiple long-standing population-structuring processes may lead to population reproductive isolation, that is, the onset of speciation, we suggest that the multifactorial population-structuring processes highlighted in this study could account for the high speciation rate characterising the Amazon Basin.


Assuntos
Characidae/genética , Animais , Characidae/classificação , Código de Barras de DNA Taxonômico , Haplótipos , Filogenia , América do Sul , Especificidade da Espécie
8.
Acta amaz. ; 38(2)2008.
Artigo em Português | VETINDEX | ID: vti-450359

RESUMO

This work tests freezing procedures of tambaqui, Colossoma macropomum , and efficiency in egg fertilizing. Sperm of a hormonally induced reproducer was collected and stored in assay pipes. The material was diluted in cryoprotectant solutions (dimetilacetamida [DMA], dimetilsulfóxido [DMSO], metanol, propilenoglicol e etilenoglicol) (1:3 ratio: sperm:diluting), and subjected to routine freezing procedures. The motility was evaluated before and after this procedure. Fertilization tests were made with cryopreserved sperm. The motility was evaluated before and after these tests. Fertilization tests were made with the cryopreserved semen. The pre-freezing motility was 80%, and after freezing, it was 20-25% for propilenoglicol and etilenoglicol, 5-10% for DMSO and 5% for DMA and methanol. The fertilization was 76% and 88% for propilenoglicol and etilenoglicol, respectively.


Este estudo testa procedimentos de congelamento do sêmen de tambaqui, Colossoma macropomum , e eficiência na fertilização de ovócitos. Sêmen de um reprodutor induzido hormonalmente foi amostrado e armazenado em tubos de ensaio. O material foi diluído em soluções crioprotetoras (dimetilacetamida [DMA], dimetilsulfóxido [DMSO], metanol, propilenoglicol e etilenoglicol) (proporção de 1:3; sêmen:diluente), e submetido a procedimentos de rotina de congelamento. A motilidade foi avaliada antes e depois deste procedimento. Testes de fertilização foram feitos com o sêmen criopreservado. A motilidade pré-congelamento foi de 80% e após o congelamento foi de 20-25% para propilenoglicol e etilenoglicol, 5-10% para DMSO e 5% para DMA e metanol. A fertilização foi de 76% e 88% para propilenoglicol e etilenoglicol, respectivamente.

9.
R. bras. Zoo. ; 10(1)2008.
Artigo em Português | VETINDEX | ID: vti-482899

RESUMO

Pellona castelnaeana, popularmente conhecida como apapá-amarelo, é uma das únicas espécies de Clupeiformes com reconhecido valor comercial registrado nos mercados pesqueiros da Amazônia. Apesar das baixas capturas desta espécie durante estudos de pesca experimental na região do rio Cautário, importante afluente do rio Guaporé em Rondônia, foi possível reunir informações sobre a estrutura da população de Pellona castelnaeana. Valores de CPUE e estimativa de alguns parâmetros biológicos como estrutura em comprimento, proporção sexual e relação peso-comprimento foram obtidas de 64 exemplares, correspondendo a 3,54% do total de exemplares capturados na área em coletas bimestrais, entre 2003 e 2004. As pescarias realizadas com a rede de cerco em diversos ambientes não capturaram nenhum exemplar; pescarias que envolveram uma bateria de 10 malhadeiras tiveram seus dados agrupados em dois períodos hidrológicos: cheia e seca. As maiores capturas em número e biomassa ocorreram em novembro e janeiro, correspondendo ao período da cheia. O menor e maior exemplar mediram 175 e 460 mm de comprimento padrão (Cp) respectivamente, com 78,3% dos indivíduos medindo entre 215 a 375 mm. Os tamanhos médios e medianos do Cp foram semelhantes entre os períodos hidrológicos. A proporção sexual foi diferente de 1:1, ocorrendo predomínio de fêmeas e a relação peso-comprimento apresentou-se isométrica. Os

10.
Artigo em Português | LILACS-Express | VETINDEX | ID: biblio-1494397

RESUMO

Pellona castelnaeana, popularmente conhecida como apapá-amarelo, é uma das únicas espécies de Clupeiformes com reconhecido valor comercial registrado nos mercados pesqueiros da Amazônia. Apesar das baixas capturas desta espécie durante estudos de pesca experimental na região do rio Cautário, importante afluente do rio Guaporé em Rondônia, foi possível reunir informações sobre a estrutura da população de Pellona castelnaeana. Valores de CPUE e estimativa de alguns parâmetros biológicos como estrutura em comprimento, proporção sexual e relação peso-comprimento foram obtidas de 64 exemplares, correspondendo a 3,54% do total de exemplares capturados na área em coletas bimestrais, entre 2003 e 2004. As pescarias realizadas com a rede de cerco em diversos ambientes não capturaram nenhum exemplar; pescarias que envolveram uma bateria de 10 malhadeiras tiveram seus dados agrupados em dois períodos hidrológicos: cheia e seca. As maiores capturas em número e biomassa ocorreram em novembro e janeiro, correspondendo ao período da cheia. O menor e maior exemplar mediram 175 e 460 mm de comprimento padrão (Cp) respectivamente, com 78,3% dos indivíduos medindo entre 215 a 375 mm. Os tamanhos médios e medianos do Cp foram semelhantes entre os períodos hidrológicos. A proporção sexual foi diferente de 1:1, ocorrendo predomínio de fêmeas e a relação peso-comprimento apresentou-se isométrica. Os

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