Cryptic Ponto-Caspian Bighead Gobies (genus Ponticola, Gobiidae, Perciformes)

Earlier karyological studies have proved that the Ponto-Caspian Bighead goby is represented by two independent species with very similar morphological features and colour pattern: Ponticola kessleri in the Black Sea basin and P. gorlap in the Caspian Sea. In 2012 several samples of gobies, correspon...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dmitry Alexandrovich Medvedev
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/conf.fmars.2015.03.00067/full
_version_ 1819052811468406784
author Dmitry Alexandrovich Medvedev
Dmitry Alexandrovich Medvedev
author_facet Dmitry Alexandrovich Medvedev
Dmitry Alexandrovich Medvedev
author_sort Dmitry Alexandrovich Medvedev
collection DOAJ
description Earlier karyological studies have proved that the Ponto-Caspian Bighead goby is represented by two independent species with very similar morphological features and colour pattern: Ponticola kessleri in the Black Sea basin and P. gorlap in the Caspian Sea. In 2012 several samples of gobies, corresponding to the diagnostic features of the Caspian Bighead goby P. gorlap, were collected in the Mangyshlak Peninsula (the Eastern Caspian, Kazakhstan). These fishes were subjected to karyological study (157 metaphase plates from 12 males, 2 females, and 13 juveniles were totally analyzed); fin clips from 11 specimens were used to extract genomic DNA for amplification of mitochondrial cyt b gene fragment (about 1098 bp); 14 specimens were used for detailed morphological analysis to define their taxonomic status and divergence level between them and other samples of P. gorlap. A total of seven karyological morphs with the chromosome numbers (2n) ranging from 38 to 44 and the stable number of chromosome arms NF=46 were revealed among goby specimens from the inshore sea regions and the Karakol Lake. This karyotype noticeably differs from the karyotype of P. gorlap distributed in the western, southern, and northern Caspian, as well as from the karyotype of P. kessleri from the Black Sea basin, in the number of chromosomes and the presence of one pair of marker submetacentrics. This data confirms the validity of the species P. iljini previously described by the type specimens from the Caspian Sea off the Mangyshlak Peninsula and included in synonyms of P. gorlap. The comparative morphological study demonstrated the low level of morphological divergent between P. iljini and P. gorlap sensu stricto. P. iljini is characterized by wider head (wider than deep) and upper lip (its width is 0.7-08 distance from the lip to the orbit), longer snout (significantly larger than horizontal eye diameter), strongly compressed caudal peduncle (its width at the base of the anal fin usually does not reach 40% of its length), and nape and upper part of opercle covered with cycloid scales only. However, all of morphometric characters of P. iljini and P. gorlap significantly overlap. All 9 haplotypes revealed in P. iljini, are species-specific. Both the maximum likelihood and maximum parsimony analyses of the haplotypes from different Ponto-Caspian goby species, deposited in the GenBank, demonstrated enough similar topologies of their trees. The haplotypes of P. iljini were combined in a separate phylogenetic lineage within the clade of Ponticola species; the most related phylogenetic lineage was formed by the haplotypes of P. gorlap. Both these lineages were combined with a separate group, consisted from two other lineages represented by haplotypes of P. kessleri and the same of P. eurycephalus. In this way, P. iljini, P. gorlap, and P. kessleri represent a group of distinct allopatric cryptic species with very low morphological divergence. The start of the divergence between P. kessleri and the Caspian species can be dated no earlier than the end of the Miocene (5.8-5.0 million years ago) when the Pontian sea-lake has divided into two separate brackish pools: the later Pontian sea-lake basin and Babadzhanskoe sea-lake in the southern part of the Caspian depression. But, at the same time, it can be dated not later than Pleistocene (2.0-0.7 Ma), when the last connection of the Caspian and the Black Sea through the Manych has been stopped. The ancestors of P. iljini could penetrate to the east coast of the Caspian Sea during the period of the largest transgressions, Akchagyl (2.5-2.0 Ma) or Apsheron (2.0-0.7 Ma). Their isolation in the Mangyshlak Peninsula region from other Caspian Bighead goby populations has been provided by two hypersaline bays, limiting the peninsula from the north (Mërtvyj Kultuk and Kajdak bays with salinity of 30 ‰ and above) and from the south (Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay with salinity of 300-350 ‰ and above), as well as the lack of a network of rivers on the peninsula.
first_indexed 2024-12-21T12:25:46Z
format Article
id doaj.art-8edfb86dbb2948a7b367a3912c588051
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2296-7745
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-21T12:25:46Z
publishDate 2015-11-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
series Frontiers in Marine Science
spelling doaj.art-8edfb86dbb2948a7b367a3912c5880512022-12-21T19:04:11ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452015-11-01210.3389/conf.fmars.2015.03.00067177589Cryptic Ponto-Caspian Bighead Gobies (genus Ponticola, Gobiidae, Perciformes)Dmitry Alexandrovich Medvedev0Dmitry Alexandrovich Medvedev1Moscow State UniversityA.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of SciencesEarlier karyological studies have proved that the Ponto-Caspian Bighead goby is represented by two independent species with very similar morphological features and colour pattern: Ponticola kessleri in the Black Sea basin and P. gorlap in the Caspian Sea. In 2012 several samples of gobies, corresponding to the diagnostic features of the Caspian Bighead goby P. gorlap, were collected in the Mangyshlak Peninsula (the Eastern Caspian, Kazakhstan). These fishes were subjected to karyological study (157 metaphase plates from 12 males, 2 females, and 13 juveniles were totally analyzed); fin clips from 11 specimens were used to extract genomic DNA for amplification of mitochondrial cyt b gene fragment (about 1098 bp); 14 specimens were used for detailed morphological analysis to define their taxonomic status and divergence level between them and other samples of P. gorlap. A total of seven karyological morphs with the chromosome numbers (2n) ranging from 38 to 44 and the stable number of chromosome arms NF=46 were revealed among goby specimens from the inshore sea regions and the Karakol Lake. This karyotype noticeably differs from the karyotype of P. gorlap distributed in the western, southern, and northern Caspian, as well as from the karyotype of P. kessleri from the Black Sea basin, in the number of chromosomes and the presence of one pair of marker submetacentrics. This data confirms the validity of the species P. iljini previously described by the type specimens from the Caspian Sea off the Mangyshlak Peninsula and included in synonyms of P. gorlap. The comparative morphological study demonstrated the low level of morphological divergent between P. iljini and P. gorlap sensu stricto. P. iljini is characterized by wider head (wider than deep) and upper lip (its width is 0.7-08 distance from the lip to the orbit), longer snout (significantly larger than horizontal eye diameter), strongly compressed caudal peduncle (its width at the base of the anal fin usually does not reach 40% of its length), and nape and upper part of opercle covered with cycloid scales only. However, all of morphometric characters of P. iljini and P. gorlap significantly overlap. All 9 haplotypes revealed in P. iljini, are species-specific. Both the maximum likelihood and maximum parsimony analyses of the haplotypes from different Ponto-Caspian goby species, deposited in the GenBank, demonstrated enough similar topologies of their trees. The haplotypes of P. iljini were combined in a separate phylogenetic lineage within the clade of Ponticola species; the most related phylogenetic lineage was formed by the haplotypes of P. gorlap. Both these lineages were combined with a separate group, consisted from two other lineages represented by haplotypes of P. kessleri and the same of P. eurycephalus. In this way, P. iljini, P. gorlap, and P. kessleri represent a group of distinct allopatric cryptic species with very low morphological divergence. The start of the divergence between P. kessleri and the Caspian species can be dated no earlier than the end of the Miocene (5.8-5.0 million years ago) when the Pontian sea-lake has divided into two separate brackish pools: the later Pontian sea-lake basin and Babadzhanskoe sea-lake in the southern part of the Caspian depression. But, at the same time, it can be dated not later than Pleistocene (2.0-0.7 Ma), when the last connection of the Caspian and the Black Sea through the Manych has been stopped. The ancestors of P. iljini could penetrate to the east coast of the Caspian Sea during the period of the largest transgressions, Akchagyl (2.5-2.0 Ma) or Apsheron (2.0-0.7 Ma). Their isolation in the Mangyshlak Peninsula region from other Caspian Bighead goby populations has been provided by two hypersaline bays, limiting the peninsula from the north (Mërtvyj Kultuk and Kajdak bays with salinity of 30 ‰ and above) and from the south (Kara-Bogaz-Gol Bay with salinity of 300-350 ‰ and above), as well as the lack of a network of rivers on the peninsula.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/conf.fmars.2015.03.00067/fullevolutionmorphologymtDNAcryptic speciesKaryologyPonto-Caspian gobies
spellingShingle Dmitry Alexandrovich Medvedev
Dmitry Alexandrovich Medvedev
Cryptic Ponto-Caspian Bighead Gobies (genus Ponticola, Gobiidae, Perciformes)
Frontiers in Marine Science
evolution
morphology
mtDNA
cryptic species
Karyology
Ponto-Caspian gobies
title Cryptic Ponto-Caspian Bighead Gobies (genus Ponticola, Gobiidae, Perciformes)
title_full Cryptic Ponto-Caspian Bighead Gobies (genus Ponticola, Gobiidae, Perciformes)
title_fullStr Cryptic Ponto-Caspian Bighead Gobies (genus Ponticola, Gobiidae, Perciformes)
title_full_unstemmed Cryptic Ponto-Caspian Bighead Gobies (genus Ponticola, Gobiidae, Perciformes)
title_short Cryptic Ponto-Caspian Bighead Gobies (genus Ponticola, Gobiidae, Perciformes)
title_sort cryptic ponto caspian bighead gobies genus ponticola gobiidae perciformes
topic evolution
morphology
mtDNA
cryptic species
Karyology
Ponto-Caspian gobies
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/conf.fmars.2015.03.00067/full
work_keys_str_mv AT dmitryalexandrovichmedvedev crypticpontocaspianbigheadgobiesgenusponticolagobiidaeperciformes
AT dmitryalexandrovichmedvedev crypticpontocaspianbigheadgobiesgenusponticolagobiidaeperciformes