Abstract

BackgroundGoodeid topminnows are live-bearing fishes endemic to the Mexican Highlands (Mesa Central, MC). Unfortunately, in the MC, environmental degradation and introduced species have pushed several goodeid species to the brink of extinction. Invasive fishes can introduce exotic parasites, and the most abundant goodeid, blackfin goodea Goodea atripinnis Jordan, is parasitised by six exotic helminths. Poeciliids are widely dispersed invasive fishes, which exert negative ecological effects on goodeids. Poeciliids host several species of the monogenean genus Gyrodactylus von Nordmann, 1832, including pathogenic, invasive parasites. Here, we looked for evidence of Gyrodactylus species switching hosts from poeciliids to goodeids.MethodsFish were collected in rivers draining the MC into both sides of the continental divide. Hosts were screened for gyrodactylid parasites in localities where G. atripinnis and poeciliids occurred sympatrically. Gyrodactylus specimens were characterised morphologically (attachment apparatus) and molecularly (internal transcribed spacer region, ITS). A Bayesian phylogenetic tree using ITS sequences established relationships between gyrodactylids collected from goodeid fishes and those from parasites infecting poeciliids.ResultsGyrodactylids were collected from G. atripinnis in six localities on both sides of the watershed where exotic poeciliids occurred sympatrically. Morphological and molecular analyses indicated the presence of four undescribed species of Gyrodactylus infecting this goodeid host. Gyrodactylus tomahuac n. sp., the most abundant and geographically widespread species, is described here. The other three Gyrodactylus spp. are not described, but their ITS sequences are used as molecular data presented here, are the only available for gyrodactylids infecting goodeid fishes. Morphological and molecular data suggest that two distinct groups of gyrodactylids infect goodeids, one of which shares a common ancestor with gyrodactylids parasitizing poeciliids.ConclusionsNo evidence was found of gyrodactylids switching hosts from invasive poeciliids to endemic goodeids, nor vice versa. Moreover, considering that G. atripinnis is known to host both Gyrodactylus lamothei Mendoza-Palmero, Sereno-Uribe & Salgado-Maldonado, 2009 and Gyrodactylus mexicanus Mendoza-Palmero, Sereno-Uribe & Salgado-Maldonado, 2009, with the addition of G. tomahuac n. sp. and the three undescribed Gyrodactylus spp. reported, at least six gyrodactylids may infect this host. This would make monogeneans the second most abundant parasite group infecting G. atripinnis, which to date is known to harbour 22 helminth species: nine digeneans, five nematodes, four cestodes, three monogeneans and one acanthocephalan.

Highlights

  • Goodeid topminnows are live-bearing fishes endemic to the Mexican Highlands (Mesa Central, Mexican central highlands Mesa Central (MC))

  • As reported previously [14], poeciliids (P. mexicana) captured within their native distribution range in the Río Pánuco basin on the Gulf of Mexico slope were infected with G. pseudobullatarudis and G. xtachuna

  • Two invasive poeciliid species (P. mexicana and P. bimaculatus) collected at Araro, Michoacán, within the Río Lerma basin were infected with the cichlid fish pathogen G. cichlidarum (GarcíaVásquez A, Razo-Mendivil U, Rubio-Godoy M, unpublished)

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Summary

Introduction

Goodeid topminnows are live-bearing fishes endemic to the Mexican Highlands (Mesa Central, MC). The same five poeciliid species plus mosquito fish, Gambusia affinis (Baird & Girard), have established reproductively in Indian continental waters [10] In both cases, exotic poeciliid fishes have co-introduced their gyrodactylid parasites [10, 13]; no evidence was found in Australia of gyrodactylids switching hosts from exotic poeciliid to native fishes. Five of the 19 species of Gyrodactylus known to infect poeciliid fishes were originally obtained from exotic fishes reared in aquaria (reviewed in [14]) Their potential pathogenic effects on native fish populations have not been fully demonstrated, some gyrodactylids known to infect poeciliid fishes are remarkable for the extent of their geographical distribution following anthropogenic translocation, and for the range of host species they infect.

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