Biology (Feb 2022)

Invasion of African <i>Clarias gariepinus</i> Drives Genetic Erosion of the Indigenous <i>C. batrachus</i> in Bangladesh

  • Imran Parvez,
  • Rukaya Akter Rumi,
  • Purnima Rani Ray,
  • Mohammad Mahbubul Hassan,
  • Shirin Sultana,
  • Rubaiya Pervin,
  • Suvit Suwanno,
  • Siriporn Pradit

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biology11020252
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. 252

Abstract

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The African catfish Clarias gariepinus has been introduced for aquaculture in Bangladesh due to the scarcity of indigenous C. batrachus fingerlings. However, the government of Bangladesh has banned the farming of C. gariepinus due to the carnivorous nature of this species. Recently C. gariepinus has been reported by fish farmers and consumers in Bangladesh, and unplanned hybridization between native and exotic species has been suspected. This study attempts to know the purity of C. batrachus by analyzing mitochondrial genes. Both directly sequenced and retrieved Cytochrome C Oxidase subunit I (COI) and cytochrome b (Cytb) genes from C. gareipinus and C. batrachus were analyzed by MEGA software. The morphologically dissimilar C. batrachus showed the least genetic distance (0.295) from C. gariepinus, which provided evidence of hybridization between the two species. Maximum likelihood (ML) phylogenetic trees showed that C. batrachus from Bangladesh did not cluster with C. batrachus of other countries, instead C. batrachus clustered with the exotic C. gariepinus. The suspected hybrid formed sister taxa with the exotic C. gariepinus. The study corroborates the genetic deterioration of C. batrachus by unplanned hybridization with the invasive C. gariepinus. Unplanned hybridization has deleterious consequences; therefore, immediate action is necessary for aquaculture sustainability and biodiversity conservation in Bangladesh.

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