6 resultados para Callichthys callichthys
Resumo:
Em populações de peixes habitando um mesmo ambiente (simpatria) e que são ecologicamente similares e geneticamente relacionadas, aumenta a possibilidade dessas populações de hospedeiros apresentar uma similar estrutura e composição das comunidades de parasitos. Porém, as comunidades de parasitos são sistemas ecológicos altamente complexos e dinâmicos, resultantes da interação de diversos fatores bióticos e abióticos. No sistema do Rio Amazonas, Callichthys callichthys Linnaeus, 1758 e Megalechis thoracata Valenciennes 1840 (Callichthyidae) são onívoras, com dieta composta de vegetais, algas, insetos e detritos. Este estudo comparou a estrutura e composição das comunidades de parasitos dessas duas espécies de Callichthyidae coletados na bacia Igarapé Fortaleza, um tributário do Rio Amazonas, na região de Macapá, estado do Amapá. Dos 38 espécimes de C. callichthys (17,3 ± 1,3 cm e 94,2 ± 22,3 g) e 38 espécimes de M. thoracata (15,3 ± 1,1 cm e 68,5 ± 16,8 g), 44,7% e 36,8%, respectivamente, estavam infectados por uma ou mais espécies de parasitos, e um total de 447 parasitos foram coletados em ambos os hospedeiros. A similaridade entre as comunidades de parasitos das duas espécies de hospedeiros foi elevada (61%), uma vez que compartilharam Genarchella genarchella, larvas de Eustrogylides sp., Rhabdochona sp. e plerocercoides de Proteocephalidae e níveis de infecção similares. Porém, Posthodiplostomum sp. infectou somente C. callichthys, enquanto Gorytocephalus spectabilis infectou somente M. thoracata. Metacercária de Posthodiplostomum sp. foi o parasito dominante para C. callichthys e G. genarchella, para M. thoracata. A maioria das infracomunidades de parasitos apresentou padrão de dispersão agregada. A comunidade de parasitos mostrou predominância de endoparasitos e similar riqueza de espécies, índice de Shannon e equitabilidade entre C. callichthys e M. thoracata. A condição corporal de ambos os hospedeiros não foi influenciada pelo baixo parasitismo. Os resultados indicam C. callichthys e M. thoracata como hospedeiros intermediários ou paratênico dos endohelmintos encontrados. A variação na comunidade parasitária, entre hospedeiros simpátricos, provavelmente ocorreu pela distribuição destes no ambiente, estrutura genética e imunológica, bem como a composição de espécies de parasitos nas comunidades.
Resumo:
The family Callichthyidae comprises eight genera of fishes widely distributed across the Neotropical region. In the present study, sequences of the mitochondrial genes 12S rRNA, 16S rRNA, ND4, tRNA(His), and tRNA(Scr) were obtained from 28 callichthyid specimens. The sample included 12 species of Corydoras, three species of Aspidoras, two species of Brochis, Dianema, Lepthoplosternum, and Megalechis, and two local populations of Callichthys and Hoplosternum. Sequences of Nematogenys inermis (Nematogenyidae), Trichomycterus areolatus, and Henonemus punctatus (Trichomycteridae), Astroblepus sp. (Astroblepidae), and Neopleeostomus paranensis, Delturus parahybae, and Hemipsilichthys nimius (Loricariidae) were included as the outgroup. Phylogenetic analyses were performed by using the methods of maximum parsimony and maximum likelihood. The results of almost all analyses were very similar. The family Callichthyidae is monophyletic and comprises two natural groups: the subfamilies Corydoradinae (Aspidoras, Brochis, and Corydoras) and Callichthyinae (Callichthys, Dianema, Hoplosternum, Lepthoplosternum, and Megalechis), as previously demonstrated by morphological studies. The relationships observed within these subfamilies are in several ways different from those previously proposed on the basis of morphological data. Molecular results were compared with the morphologic and cytogenetic data available on the family. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
Resumo:
In the present study, the karyotype of three species (nine populations) of the Callichthyinae subfamily were investigated with the objective of better understanding the pattern of relationship among the genera that compose the subfamily. Among the four populations of Callichthys callichthys studied, two showed 2n=56 chromosomes and two 2n=58 chromosomes. Up to eight additional microchromosomes were observed in the sample from Marilia. The three populations of Hoplosternum littorale displayed the same number of chromosomes, 2n=60, and karyotypic constitution, 6M+2SM+52A. The two populations of Megalechis personata showed 2n=62 chromosomes and similar karyotypic formulae, 8M+54A and 6M+2SM+54A. Terminal Ag-NORs were found in one chromosome pair of C. callichthys, H. littorale, and M. personata from Itiquira, and in two pairs in M. personata from Rio Branco. The populations of C. callichthys showed C-band positive segments in centromeric and pericentromeric position and the populations of H. littorale and M. personata exhibited C-band positive segments in centromeric and/or interstitial position. Contrarily to the extensive chromosome rearrangements verified in the Corydoradinae subfamily, in the Callichthyinae subfamily a small number of changes seems to have occurred in its karyotypic evolution.
Resumo:
The family Callichthyidae, divided into the subfamilies Corydoradinae and Callichthyinae, contains more than 200 species of armoured catfishes distributed throughout the Neotropics, as well as fossil species dating from the Palaeocene. Both subfamilies are very widely distributed throughout the continent, with some species ranges extending across multiple hypothesized biogeographical barriers. Species with such vast geographical ranges could be made up of multiple cryptic populations that are genetically distinct and have diverged over time. Although relationships among Callichthyinae genera have been thoroughly investigated, the historical biogeography of the Callichthyinae and the presence of species complexes have yet to be examined. Furthermore, there is a lack of fossil-calibrated molecular phylogenies providing a time frame for the evolution of the Callichthyinae. Here, we present a novel molecular data set for all Callichthyinae genera composed of partial sequences of mitochondrial and nuclear markers. These data were used to construct a fossil-calibrated tree for the Callichthyinae and to reconstruct patterns of spatiotemporal evolution. All phylogenetic analyses [Bayesian, maximum likelihood and maximum parsimony (MP)] resulted in a single fully resolved and well-supported hypothesis for the Callichthyinae, where Dianema is the sister group of all the remaining genera. Results suggest that the ancestry of most Callichthyinae genera originated in the Amazonas basin, with a number of subsequent ancestral dispersal events between adjacent basins. High divergences in sequences and time were observed for several samples of Hoplosternum littorale, Megalechis picta and Callichthys callichthys, suggesting that these species may contain cryptic diversity. The results highlight the need for a taxonomic revision of species complexes within the Callichthyinae, which may reveal more diversity within this relatively species-poor lineage. © 2013 Blackwell Verlag GmbH.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)