AI Article Synopsis

  • The genus Astyanax, a type of neotropical fish, and their helminth parasites, migrated from South America to North America during the Great American Biotic Interchange (GABI), leading to their distribution in Mexico and the USA.
  • The study characterizes the monogenean parasites Gyrodactylus infecting two species of Astyanax in Mexico, confirming existing species and describing two new ones based on morphological and genetic analyses.
  • The research indicates a pattern of gradual divergence among gyrodactylid species as their fish hosts adapted to new environments north of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt, with some species exclusively found north of this transition zone.

Article Abstract

The neotropical fish genus Astyanax (Characidae) and its associated helminths migrated northward from South America following the Great American Biotic Interchange (GABI): ca. 150 Astyanax spp. are found throughout South and Central America, up to the Mexico-USA border. Most characids are distributed south of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt (TMVB), which bisects the country and represents a major transition zone between the neotropical and nearctic realms. Here, we characterize parasites of the monogenean genus Gyrodactylus infecting Astyanax spp. in Mexico: Astyanax aeneus south of the TMBV, Astyanax mexicanus north of it. Based on morphological, phylogenetic (internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and cytochrome oxidase subunit II (cox 2)) and statistical analyses of morphometric data, we confirmed the validity of Gyrodactylus pakan and Gyrodactylus teken, and erected two new species, Gyrodactylus aphaa n. sp. and Gyrodactylus ricardoi n. sp. These four gyrodactylids are part of a complex of morphologically cryptic species, which are phylogenetically closely related to each other, and sister species to Gyrodactylus carolinae and Gyrodactylus heteracanthus, parasites of characins in Brazil. Four gyrodactylid lineages (G. pakan, G. ricardoi n. sp., G. teken, Gyrodactylus sp. A) are distributed north of the TMVB; G. pakan is also widely distributed south of the TMVB, together with G. aphaa n. sp. Based on the ITS phylogeny, Brazilian parasites form a sister clade to all Mexican gyrodactylids, whose derived clades are distributed in progressively more northerly latitudes in Mexico - the three most-derived species north of the TMVB. This would suggest that gyrodactylid species diverged gradually, presumably as their characid fish hosts colonized and adapted to new environments north of the TMVB.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2024.10.001DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The genus Astyanax, a type of neotropical fish, and their helminth parasites, migrated from South America to North America during the Great American Biotic Interchange (GABI), leading to their distribution in Mexico and the USA.
  • The study characterizes the monogenean parasites Gyrodactylus infecting two species of Astyanax in Mexico, confirming existing species and describing two new ones based on morphological and genetic analyses.
  • The research indicates a pattern of gradual divergence among gyrodactylid species as their fish hosts adapted to new environments north of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt, with some species exclusively found north of this transition zone.
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