Publication | Open Access
Morphological and genetic analysis of fish of a Carassius complex (Cyprinidae) in Lake Kasumigaura with reference to the taxonomic status of two all-female triploid morphs
27
Citations
14
References
2003
Year
GeneticsTaxonomyAll-female Triploid MorphsCarassius ComplexPhylogenetic AnalysisGenetic AnalysisPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyEvolutionary TaxonomyPrincipal Component AnalysisPhylogeny ComparisonMorphological EvidenceMorphologyGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsDiploid–triploid MixtureBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPhylogenetic MethodCladisticsAquatic OrganismMedicinePlant Phylogeny
The classification of the Carassius complex (Cyprinidae) including all-female triploids, called ginbuna in Japanese, is so confused that three sympatric morphs of crucian carp in Lake Kasumigaura are categorized into two different subspecies within a species. We examined them in order to explain the coexistence of more than one subspecies and determine the founder of the triploid lineages in the crucian carp fauna in the lake. Principal component analysis proved that the three sympatric morphs had a morphometric basis distinguishable from each other. Ploidy was determined by flow cytometry which showed triploids in two morphs and diploids in the other morph. Stepwise discriminant analysis using only meristic characteristics could separate the diploids from the triploids. Phylogenetic analysis using mitochondrial DNA inferred two lineages in which one was composed of a triploid morph and the other was a diploid–triploid mixture. Disagreement between the taxonomic status and the phylogenetic status is explicable by assuming that the triploids in the Carassius complex had independent origins leading to the different subspecies. C. auratus langsdorfii appears to show genetic complexities that traditional taxonomic classification can not unravel. .
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