Abstract

Karyotypes and chromosomal nucleolus organizer region or NOR phenotypes of 19 described and two undescribed species of western North American cyprinids are documented. All 21 species examined possessed 2N=50 chromosomes and at least two pair of NOR-bearing chromosomes. The high incidence of multiple NOR chromosomes among western cyprinids is unusual. One pair of A NOR chromosomes was found in all 21 species, and 17 species possessed a second pair of A NOR chromosomes. An AA NOR state was hypothesized to represent a chromosomal synapomorphy uniting western cyprinids (including the genus Richardsonius) into a monophyletic assemblage. Within this clade, a transition from an A NOR to a D NOR was hypothesized to represent a chromosomal synapomorphy uniting three speices of the subgenus Gila, and an addition of an F NOR was hypothesized to represent a chromosomal synapomorphy uniting two species of the genus Rhinichthys. Chromosomal NORs in western cyprinids appear conserved relative to eastern cyprinids and may be the result of (i) a process of karyotypic canalization, and/or (ii) character state reversal in, or introgressive hybridization among, western cyprinid genera.

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