Abstract

Valid fish species identification is essential for biodiversity conservation and fisheries management. Here, we provide a sequence reference library based on mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I for a valid identification of 79 freshwater fish species from the Lower Paraná River. Neighbour-joining analysis based on K2P genetic distances formed non-overlapping clusters for almost all species with a ≥99% bootstrap support each. Identification was successful for 97.8% of species as the minimum genetic distance to the nearest neighbour exceeded the maximum intraspecific distance in all these cases. A barcoding gap of 2.5% was apparent for the whole data set with the exception of four cases. Within-species distances ranged from 0.00% to 7.59%, while interspecific distances varied between 4.06% and 19.98%, without considering Odontesthes species with a minimum genetic distance of 0%. Sequence library validation was performed by applying BOLDs BIN analysis tool, Poisson Tree Processes model and Automatic Barcode Gap Discovery, along with a reliable taxonomic assignment by experts. Exhaustive revision of vouchers was performed when a conflicting assignment was detected after sequence analysis and BIN discordance evaluation. Thus, the sequence library presented here can be confidently used as a benchmark for identification of half of the fish species recorded for the Lower Paraná River.

Highlights

  • Reliable species identification is necessary for conservation and sustainable exploitation of natural resources

  • Most species of commercial interest were represented in this study, such as the large migratory species Prochilodus lineatus, Salminus brasiliensis, Pseudoplatystoma corruscans, Brycon orbignyanus and Leporinus obtusidens

  • Species belonging to the orders Clupeiformes (Lysengraulis grossidens, Ramnogaster melanostoma, and Pellona flavipinnis) and Atheriniformes (O. bonariensis) that migrate from estuarine or marine environments to freshwater habitats were identified

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Summary

Introduction

Reliable species identification is necessary for conservation and sustainable exploitation of natural resources. DNA sequences of highly conserved genes have been used as a tool to identify biological species. This approach became especially relevant when identification based on morphological characters is not possible (e.g. larvae, eggs and fragmented tissue). Barcoding Fishes from the Lower Paraná River “Fishes from the Lower Paraná River” project can be identified by the project code LAR

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