Abstract

Paleo-drainage connections and headwater stream-captures are two main historical processes shaping the distribution of strictly freshwater fishes. Recently, bathymetric-based methods of paleo-drainage reconstruction have opened new possibilities to investigate how these processes have shaped the genetic structure of freshwater organisms. In this context, the present study used paleo-drainage reconstructions and single-locus cluster delimitation analyses to examine genetic structure on the whole distribution of Pareiorhaphis garbei, a ‘near threatened’ armored catfish from the Fluminense freshwater ecoregion in Southeastern Brazil. Sequences of two mitochondrial genes (cytochrome b and cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1) were obtained from five sampling sites in four coastal drainages: Macaé (KAE), São João (SJO), Guapi-Macacu [sub-basins Guapiaçu (GAC) and Guapimirim (GMI)], and Santo Aleixo (SAL). Pronounced genetic structure was found, involving 10 haplotypes for cytB and 6 for coi, with no haplotypes shared between localities. Coalescent-based delineation methods as well as distance-based methods revealed genetic clusters corresponding to each sample site. Paleo-drainage reconstructions showed two putative paleo-rivers: an eastern one connecting KAE and SJO; and a western one merging in the Guanabara Bay (GAC, GMI, and SAL). A disagreement was uncovered between the inferred past riverine connections and current population genetic structure. Although KAE and SJO belong to the same paleo-river, the latter is more closely related to specimens from the Guanabara paleo-river. This discordance between paleo-drainage connections and phylogenetic structure may indicate an ancient stream-capture event in headwaters of this region. Furthermore, all analyses showed high divergence between KAE and the other lineages, suggesting at least one cryptic species in the latter, and that the nominal species should be restricted to the Macaé river basin, its type locality. In this drainage, impacts such as the invasive species and habitat loss can be especially threatening for such species with a narrow range. Our results also suggest that freshwater fishes from headwaters in the Serra do Mar mountains might have different biogeographical patterns than those from the lowlands, indicating a complex and dynamic climatic and geomorphological history.

Highlights

  • Two alternative hypotheses are typically invoked to explain disjoint distributions encompassing more than one drainage basin of strictly freshwater species: past anastomoses of coastal basins due to marine regression episodes that resulted in paleodrainage connections or headwater stream-captures caused by tectonic adjustments (Albert and Reis, 2011)

  • One of the exceptions within the genus is Pareiorhaphis garbei (Ihering, 1911), a species found in four coastal basins of the Rio de Janeiro State in southeastern Brazil: Macaé, São João, Guapi-Macacu, and Santo Aleixo drainages (Maia et al, 2013)

  • This study addresses the genetic structure of P. garbei to infer historical processes that may have influenced the species’ disjointed distribution along coastal basins of the Serra do Mar

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Two alternative hypotheses are typically invoked to explain disjoint distributions encompassing more than one drainage basin of strictly freshwater species: past anastomoses of coastal basins due to marine regression episodes that resulted in paleodrainage connections or headwater stream-captures caused by tectonic adjustments (Albert and Reis, 2011). Stream capture occurs when a river changes its course and connects with another drainage system as a result of geomorphological changes (Bishop, 1995; Wilkinson et al, 2006), whereas paleo-drainage connections happen when sea levels are lowered by climatic changes, causing basins that previously were isolated to coalesce (Voris, 2000; Dias et al, 2014) To assess how these processes have influenced the genetic structure of freshwater fishes, recently developed GIS-based methods have been used to reconstruct paleo-river systems (Dias et al, 2014; Thomaz et al, 2015, 2017). The geographic distribution of P. garbei lies entirely within the Atlantic Forest biodiversity hotspot (Myers et al, 2000), which in turn is situated within the Fluminense freshwater ecoregion, a small area comprising about 110 freshwater fish species and a high proportion (42%) of endemic species (Albert et al, 2011)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.