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    Morphology, Moleculer, and Monogenean Parasites: An example of an integrative approach to Cichlid Biodiversity.

    Authors
    Van Steenberge, M.
    Pariselle, A.
    Huyse, T.
    Volckaert, FAM.
    Snoeks, J.
    Vanhove, MPM.
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    Discipline
    Biological sciences
    Subject
    Invertebrates
    Vertebrates
    Audience
    Scientific
    Date
    2015
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Description
    The unparalleled biodiversity of Lake Tanganyika (Africa) has fascinated biologists for over a century; its unique cichlid communities are a preferred model for evolutionary research. Although species delineation is, in most cases, relatively straightforward, higher-order classifications were shown not to agree with monophyletic groups. Here, traditional morphological methods meet their limitations. A typical example are the tropheine cichlids currently belonging to Simochromis and Pseudosimochromis. The affiliations of these widespread and abundant cichlids are poorly understood. Molecular work suggested that genus and species boundaries should be revised. Moreover, previous morphological results indicated that intraspecific variation should be considered to delineate species in Lake Tanganyika cichlids. We review the genera Simochromis and Pseudosimochromis using an integrative approach. Besides a morphometric study and a barcoding approach, monogenean Cichlidogyrus (Platyhelminthes: Ancyrocephalidae) gill parasites, often highly species-specific, are used as complementary markers. Six new species are described. Cichlidogyrus raeymaekersi sp. nov., C. muterezii sp. nov. and C. banyankimbonai sp. nov. infect S. diagramma. Cichlidogyrus georgesmertensi sp. nov. was found on S. babaulti and S. pleurospilus, C. franswittei sp. nov. on both S. marginatus and P. curvifrons and C. frankwillemsi sp. nov. only on P. curvifrons. As relatedness between Cichlidogyrus species usually reflects relatedness between hosts, we considered Simochromis monotypic because the three Cichlidogyrus species found on S. diagramma belonged to a different morphotype than those found on the other Simochromis. The transfer of S. babaulti, S. marginatus, S. pleurospilus and S. margaretae to Pseudosimochromis was justified by the similarity of their Cichlidogyrus fauna and the intermediate morphology of S. margaretae. Finally parasite data also supported the synonymy between S. pleurospilus and S. babaulti, a species that contains a large amount of geographical morphological variation.
    Citation
    Van Steenberge, M.; Pariselle, A.; Huyse, T.; Volckaert, FAM.; Snoeks, J.; Vanhove, MPM. (2015). Morphology, Moleculer, and Monogenean Parasites: An example of an integrative approach to Cichlid Biodiversity.. , PLoS ONE,
    Identifiers
    uri: https://orfeo.belnet.be/handle/internal/2467
    Type
    Article
    Peer-Review
    No
    Language
    eng
    Links
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