Abstract

In the present study, populations of small-sized smiliogastrin barbs with a thickened and serrated last simple dorsal-fin ray distributed in the Main Ethiopian Rift were analysed. An integrated approach combining genetic markers and a variety of morphological methods based on a wide set of characters, including osteology and sensory canals, proved to be very productive for taxonomy in this group of fishes. The results showed that Ethiopian Enteromius species with a serrated dorsal-fin ray are distant from the true E. paludinosus (with E. longicauda as a synonym) and the so-called E. paludinosus complex involves several supposedly valid species with two distinct species occurring in the Main Ethiopian Rift area. A new species, Enteromius yardiensissp. nov., is described from the Afar Depression in the north-eastern part of the Northern Main Ethiopian Rift. Enteromius akakianus is resurrected as a valid species including populations from the Central Main Ethiopian Rift (basins of lakes Langano, Ziway, and Awasa). No genetic data were available for E. akakianus from its type locality. Enteromius yardiensissp. nov. is clearly distant from E. akakianus from the Central Main Ethiopian Rift by CO1 and cytb barcodes: pairwise distances between the new species and the Ethiopian congeners were 5.4 % to 11.0 %. Morphologically, the new species most clearly differs from all examined Ethiopian congeners by three specialisations which are unique in the group: the absence of the anterior barbel, the absence of the medial branch of the supraorbital sensory canal, and few, 1–3, commonly two, scale rows between the lateral line and the anus.

Highlights

  • Small-sized smiliogastrin barbs are typical representatives of the fish fauna in sub-Saharan Africa (Lévêque and Daget 1984; Skelton 2001; Stiassny et al 2007) with several hundred species distributed in almost all drainages of the continent (Lévêque and Daget 1984)

  • Pairwise distance between Ethiopian and southern African lineages ranged from 10.5 % to 16.3 %

  • The type series of these nominal species examined in the present study showed that they are different from E. yardiensis sp. nov., first of all, by the presence of the anterior barbel, which is well-developed in all species including small-sized E. vinciguerraii

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Summary

Introduction

Small-sized smiliogastrin barbs are typical representatives of the fish fauna in sub-Saharan Africa (Lévêque and Daget 1984; Skelton 2001; Stiassny et al 2007) with several hundred species distributed in almost all drainages of the continent (Lévêque and Daget 1984) Despite their widespread occurrence, phylogenetic relationships within the group and taxonomy of most species have not been fully resolved yet (Yang et al 2015; Ren and Mayden 2016; Hayes and Armbruster 2017). We use the genus name Enteromius as a convenient taxonomic compromise at the present level of knowledge on phylogenetic interrelationships in the group

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