评估印度五条河流中亚洲鞘鲶 Wallago attu (Siluridae) 种群的形态变化

IF 0.8 4区 生物学 Q4 MARINE & FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
G. Kumar, A. Kashyap, M. Serajuddin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要 本研究分析了从印度北部勒克瑙、坎普尔和阿格拉地区的戈姆蒂河、甘加河、亚穆纳河,印度东部加尔各答的胡格利河以及印度南部喀拉拉邦的潘帕河采样的亚洲鲶鱼 Wallago attu(Bloch 和 Schneider,1801 年)的形态变化。在不伤害鱼类的情况下拍摄了 261 个阿图鲑标本的图像,使用 8 个数字化同源地标进行桁架分析和几何形态计量学,以评估形态计量学变化。采用方差分析(ANOVA)、多元方差分析(MANOVA)、主成分分析(PCA)和判别函数分析(DFA)对尺寸校正形态变量进行分析。由于大小和形状的变化,所有 PC 的系数与 31 个显著(p < 0.001)的桁架测量值呈正负相关。在桁架分析中,头部区域的形态测量值,如头长(HL)、眼径(ED)、眶间长(IOL)和鼻长(SNL)对区分种群的贡献最大。亚穆纳河鱼类的头长(ED)、眼径(HL)、眶间长(IOL)和鼻长(SNL)明显小于其他鱼类种群(p < 0.001)。这可能是由于亚穆纳河污染严重以及鱼类摄食方式的不同造成的。PCs 和相对翘曲在几何分析中显示出差异,这是因为不同河流种群的体形存在差异。DFA 的散点图显示,在五条野生河流的鱼类种群中存在三个不同的 W. attu 表型组,在桁架分析和几何分析中,将鱼类归入其原始组别的正确率分别为 70.5%和 83.9%。由于 Gomti 河、Ganga 河和 Hooghly 河三个河流种群之间的混杂程度较高(分类错误率最高),因此发现这三个河流中的鱼类种群是单一的同质种群,而 Yamuna 河和 Pampa 河种群由于混杂程度极低,因此是两个互不重叠的孤立群体。本研究中的这些差异可能是由于栖息地的变化限制了鱼类的活动而造成的地理隔离和河流支离破碎的影响。这是第一份关于阿图罗汉鱼形态计量评估的报告,为进一步确认种群研究提供了基础数据,有助于保护和可持续管理这种脆弱的鱼类。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Assessment of Morphometric Variations among the Populations of Asian Sheat Catfish Wallago attu (Siluridae) from Five Indian Rivers

Assessment of Morphometric Variations among the Populations of Asian Sheat Catfish Wallago attu (Siluridae) from Five Indian Rivers

Abstract

Morphological variations of the Asian sheat catfish, Wallago attu (Bloch and Schneider, 1801) sampled from the rivers Gomti, Ganga, Yamuna at Lucknow, Kanpur and Agra districts in Northern India, river Hooghly at Kolkata in Eastern India and river Pampa at Kerala in Southern India were analyzed in the present study. Images of 261 specimens of W. attu were taken without harming the fish to evaluate the morphometric variation using 8 digitized homologous landmarks for truss analysis and geometric morphometrics. Size corrected morphometric variables were analyzed using analysis of variance (ANOVA), multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA), principal component analysis (PCA) and discriminant function analysis (DFA). Coefficients of all PCs were positively and negatively correlated to 31 significant (p < 0.001) truss measurements due to variations in size and shape. Morphometric measurements lying in the head region such as head length (HL), eye diameter (ED), inter-orbital length (IOL) and snout length (SNL) contributed most to differentiate the populations in truss analysis. The ED, HL, SNL and IOL of Yamuna fish was significantly (p < 0.001) smaller than the other fish populations. This could be attributed to the heavy pollution load in the Yamuna River and differences in the feeding regimes of fish. PCs and relative warps depicted differences in geometric analysis because of body shape variations among different river populations. The scatter plot in DFA revealed the presence of three distant and different phenotypic groups of W. attu among five wild river populations of fish with 70.5% and 83.9% of correct classification of fish into their original groups in truss and geometric analysis respectively. A single homogenous stock of fish was found to be in the rivers Gomti, Ganga and Hooghly because of a high level of intermixing (maximum misclassification) among the three river populations, whereas Yamuna and Pampa populations were two non-overlapping isolated groups due to negligible intermixing. These variations in the present study might be the effect of geographical isolation and river fragmentation due to the change in habitat that restricts fish movements. This is the first report on the morphometric assessment of W. attu that provides base line data for further confirmatory stock studies that would be useful for conservation and sustainable management of this vulnerable fish.

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来源期刊
Inland Water Biology
Inland Water Biology 生物-海洋与淡水生物学
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
55.60%
发文量
87
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Inland Water Biology publishes thematic reviews and original papers devoted to flora and fauna in waterbodies, biodiversity of hydrobionts, biology, morphology, systematics, ecology, ethology, ecological physiology and biochemistry of aquatic organisms, patterns of biological cycle, structure and functioning of aquatic ecosystems, anthropogenic and uncontrolled natural impacts on aquatic organisms and ecosystems, invasion of nonindigenous species into ecosystems and their ecology, methods of hydrobiological and ichthyological studies.
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