Abstract

We critically compared Marcusenius specimens from the mouth of the Cunene River on the Namibia/Angola border, a harsh desert environment on the Atlantic Ocean coast virtually devoid of aerial insects with aquatic larvae which are an important food item, with Marcusenius multisquamatus Kramer & Wink, 2013 from the escarpment region of that same river, in a relatively rich and productive subtropical savannah environment. River mouth specimens were differentiated in morphology and electric organ discharges, as determined by ANOVA/MANOVA comparisons, principal component and discriminant analyses on morphological and electrophysiological characters, and genetics, including sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene, indicating reproductive isolation. Specimens from the river mouth differed from M. multisquamatus, their closest relatives, by having a shorter snout, a smaller eye diameter, and smaller nares separation. River mouth specimens were also differentiated from other, increasingly less-close relatives, such as M. altisambesi Kramer et al., 2007 from the Okavango River, Botswana, and from M. krameri Maake et al., 2014 from the Limpopo System, South Africa. We therefore designate the new species Marcusenius desertus sp. nov. for the Cunene River mouth population.

Highlights

  • With about 47 species, the genus Marcusenius Gill, 1862 is one of the largest within the largest freshwater fish family endemic to Africa, the Mormyridae or snoutfish (Eschmeyer et al n.d.)

  • We studied 84 fish from three rivers: the lower section of the Cunene River where it forms the border between Namibia and Angola, the Okavango River where it starts to fan out to form a huge inland delta in Botswana, and the Mokolo River, a southern tributary to the Limpopo River in South Africa

  • The river mouth samples had a shorter snout length per head length (LSo/HL), a smaller eye diameter per head length (OD/HL), and a greater value for head length divided by nares separation (HL/Na) than the escarpment sample (p < 0.01)

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Summary

Introduction

With about 47 species, the genus Marcusenius Gill, 1862 is one of the largest within the largest freshwater fish family endemic to Africa, the Mormyridae or snoutfish (Eschmeyer et al n.d.). Among them is M. multisquamatus, the bulldog fish endemic to the Cunene River (Kramer and Wink 2013). The Cunene River is assumed to have historical connections with the Okavango System, especially through its headwaters in Angola (Moore and Larkin 2001). This would explain the high similarity index of its fish fauna with that of the Okavango (Skelton 1994)

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