PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

DNA barcoding of fish fauna from low order streams of Tapajós River basin.

  • Karen Larissa Auzier Guimarães,
  • Marcos Paulo Alho de Sousa,
  • Frank Raynner Vasconcelos Ribeiro,
  • Jorge Ivan Rebelo Porto,
  • Luís Reginaldo Ribeiro Rodrigues

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209430
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 12
p. e0209430

Abstract

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The Amazon basin harbors a megadiverse fish fauna spread in an intricate network of big rivers and small streams. The Amazonian streams are home of many small sized fishes that remains poorly documented. In order to accelerate the scientific knowledge on these important aquatic systems we adopted a modern integrative approach joining morphology and molecular tools to investigate the ichthyofauna assemblages from low order streams situated on the lower Tapajós River Basin. Cytochrome c Oxidase I (COI) DNA barcodes from 252 specimens collected from 10 stream sites were obtained. The combined analysis revealed 29 species, 21 genera and 11 families. Cryptic diversity was evidenced in Knodus sp.1, Aequidens epae and Copella callolepis, in which deep genetic divergence were detected (intraspecific distances: 20.48%, 7.99% and 3.77%, respectively). The putative new species showed closer relationships with their counterparts occurring in the Tapajós-Xingu water drainages.