Abstract

Simple SummarySardines and other herring-like fishes (Clupeidae) are well-known, mostly from open seas, and globally commercially important. Their freshwater representatives receive less attention. Tropical Africa harbours over 20 species of the latter, classified under Pellonulini. These small river and lake fishes sustain locally important fisheries and are sometimes exported (inter)nationally. There is little research on them, let alone their parasites. An abundant parasite group of African freshwater clupeids is monogenean flatworms infecting their gills. Since the discoveries of the first (1969) and second species (1973) systematics of these monogeneans was ignored until 2018, when they were classified under the new genus Kapentagyrus with three species from three pellonuline species. Here, we inspected the gills of 12 West and Central African pellonulines, 10 from which there were no known parasites. We discovered and described 11 new species of Kapentagyrus. They look highly similar; distinguishing them requires measuring parts of their attachment organ. This study more than quadruples the known species richness of Kapentagyrus, and almost quadruples the number of pellonuline species of which monogeneans are known. Monogeneans are suitable tags for the lifestyle and history of their hosts. Therefore, parasitological knowledge on these poorly studied fishes will contribute to understanding data-poor African fisheries.Unlike their marine counterparts, tropical freshwater clupeids receive little scientific attention. However, they sustain important fisheries that may be of (inter)national commercial interest. Africa harbours over 20 freshwater clupeid species within Pellonulini. Recent research suggests their most abundant parasites are gill-infecting monogenean flatworms within Kapentagyrus. After inspecting specimens of 12 freshwater clupeids from West and Central Africa, mainly sourced in biodiversity collections, we propose 11 new species of Kapentagyrus, which we describe using their haptoral and genital morphology. Because of their high morphological similarity, species delineation relies mostly on the morphometrics of anchors and hooks. Specifically, earlier, molecular taxonomic work indicated that the proportion between the length of the anchor roots, and between the hook and anchor length, is diagnostic. On average, about one species of Kapentagyrus exists per pellonuline species, although Pellonula leonensis harbours four species and Microthrissa congica two, while Microthrissa moeruensis and Potamothrissa acutirostris share a gill monogenean species. This study more than quadruples the number of known species of Kapentagyrus, also almost quadrupling the number of pellonuline species of which monogeneans are known. Since members of Kapentagyrus are informative about their hosts’ ecology, evolutionary history, and introduction routes, this enables a parasitological perspective on several data-poor African fisheries.

Highlights

  • The bulk of pelagic marine fish catches, and, the largest fisheries on the planet, are based on sardines and anchovies, representatives of Clupeiformes [1]

  • Separation of species infecting members of Odaxothrissa Boulenger, 1899 and Kapentagyrus verbisti n. sp. ex P. leonensis from Lambaréné (Gabon) was visible along the first PC axis mainly driven by parameters from both dorsal and ventral anchors

  • K. chochamandai n. sp. and its congeners infecting P. leonensis lies in: (1) the more elongated appearance of the dorsal anchors of K. hugei n. sp. and K. verbisti n. sp., with a length to notch of 21 to 25 μm and 26 to 28 μm, respectively, versus 17 to 19 μm in K. chochamandai n. sp.; (2) the smooth transition between the outer root and blade of the ventral anchor in K. hahni n. sp., where a clear indentation is present in K. chochamandai n. sp.; and

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Summary

Introduction

The bulk of pelagic marine fish catches, and, the largest fisheries on the planet, are based on sardines and anchovies, representatives of Clupeiformes [1]. Less species-rich and less well-studied are the freshwater clupeiformes, such as the members of Pellonulini. This is a tribe of dorosomatine clupeids restricted to Afrotropical freshwaters, containing ca. Given the rising importance of freshwater fisheries as a protein source in Africa [5], we expect their economic and ecological role to increase. Their proportion in African freshwater fish catches has increased during the second half of the 20th century, towards almost half of the total tonnage over a range of African lakes (not including Lake Victoria). Clupeids are among the fishes that can quickly and abundantly colonise the newly formed pelagic habitat after damming African rivers [3]

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