AI Article Synopsis

  • The fish family Botiidae, found in the Indian subcontinent and East/Southeast Asia, includes various diploid and tetraploid species.
  • The study created a phylogeny for 33 Botiidae species using mitochondrial genes to analyze their evolutionary relationships and polyploidization events.
  • Findings indicate two main lineages within Botiidae and suggest that all diploid species belong to one subfamily, while tetraploid species belong to another, with a single polyploidization event likely occurring in the lineage leading to the Botiinae.

Article Abstract

The freshwater fish family Botiidae is represented by seven genera on the Indian subcontinent and in East and Southeast Asia and includes diploid as well as evolutionary tetraploid species. We present a phylogeny of Botiidae including 33 species representing all described genera using the mitochondrial cytochrome b and 12s rRNA genes to reconstruct the phylogenetic relationships among the genera and to estimate the number of polyploidisation events during their evolution. Our results show two major lineages, the subfamilies Leptobotiinae with the genera Leptobotia and Parabotia and Botiinae with the genera Botia, Chromobotia, Sinibotia, Syncrossus, and Yasuhikotakia. Our results suggest that two species that were traditionally placed into the genus Yasuhikotakia form a monophyletic lineage with the species of Sinibotia. A review of the data on the ploidy level of the included species shows all diploid species to belong to Leptobotiinae and all tetraploid species to Botiinae. A single polyploidisation event can therefore be hypothesised to have occurred in the ancestral lineage leading to the Botiinae.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2005.09.018DOI Listing

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