Submit or Track your Manuscript LOG-IN

Geometric Morphometric Analysis of the Morphological Variation among Three Lenoks of Genus Brachymystax in China

PJZ_50_3_885-895

 

 

Geometric Morphometric Analysis of the Morphological Variation among Three Lenoks of Genus Brachymystax in China

Yanxiao Meng1, Guihua Wang1, Dongmei Xiong1,*, Haixia Liu1, Xiaolin Liu1, Lixin Wang1 and Jianlu Zhang2

1Department of Fisheries Science, College of Animal Science and Technology, Northwest A&F University, Yangling, Shaanxi 712100, China

2Shaanxi Key Laboratory for Animal Conservation, Shaanxi Institute of Zoology, Xi’an, Shaanxi 710032, China

ABSTRACT

The genus Brachymystax mainly distributes in the Amur River and streams of the Qinling Mountains of northern China. There is a debate on the validation of subspecies B. lenok tsinlingensis Li for a long time. Some ichthyologists thought that there should be two species (B. lenok and B. tumensis) in Amur River and a subspecies (B. lenok tsinlingensis) in the Qinling Mountains, while others believed no division of the subspecies. Thus, 169 specimens of Brachymystax spp. were collected from three locations (Heihe River, Amur and Ussuri River) to identify the taxonomic status in terms of morphological variation among these species or subspecies. Results of geometric morphometric analysis indicated significantly morphological variation in body shape among three morphotypes based on 18 landmarks. Principal component analysis (PCA) showed that the cumulative contribution rate of the first five principal components were 72.99%. CV1 (65.77%) and CV2 (34.23%) were well explained 100% of the observed variation among three morphotypes by Canonical variate analyses (CVA). The morphological variation was well defined by PCA and CVA: B. lenok tsinlingensis had wider and elongate head, the longest eye diameter and the widest dorsoventral orientation; B. lenok had tapered and narrow head, sharp snout and medium diameter of eye; B. tumensis had short head, blunt snout and shortest eye diameter and narrow dorsoventral orientation. Furthermore, discriminant function analysis (DFA) showed that all samples (except six) were correctly reclassified. Our morphological analysis supported the validity of taxonomic status of B. lenok and B. tumensis as two species, and B. lenok tsinlingensis could be considered as an independent species.


Article Information

Received 05 October 2017

Revised 13 December 2017

Accepted 30 December 2017

Available online 11 April 2018

Authors’ Contribution

YM and DX designed the study. YM and GW collected morphological data. HL, LW and JZ collected samples. YM analyzed the data. YM and DX wrote the manuscript. DX and XL supplied financial support.

Key words

Brachymystax, Geometric morphometrics, Shape variation.

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17582/journal.pjz/2018.50.3.885.895

* Corresponding author: xiongdongmei@nwsuaf.edu.cn

0030-9923/2018/0003-0885 $ 9.00/0

Copyright 2018 Zoological Society of Pakistan



Introduction

 

The genus Brachymystax Günther, 1866, belonging to Salmonidae, Salmoniformes, widely distributes in the rivers of Siberia, Mongolia, the Korea Peninsula and north of China (Li, 1966; Song and Fang, 1984; Qin and Wang, 1989; Froufe et al., 2008). In China, the genus Brachymystax distributes in Amur River drainage, Tumen River, Yalu River, Luanhe River, IrtySh River, Burqin River, Ulungur River and the southern and northern streams of Qinling Mountains (Huang et al., 1964; Li, 1984; Song and Fang, 1984; Qin and Wang, 1989; Liu, 1992). Based on comparing some characters of specimens from two geographical populations (the Amur River and the streams of Qinling Mountains), such as number of gill rakers, lateral-line scales and pyloric caeca, Li (1966) considere that the Brachymystax fish distributed in the Qinling differ from that of Amur River, and described it as an endemic subspecies, and named as Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis Li. B. lenok tsinlingensis is thought to be a glacial relict, as one of the southernmost Salmonidae species (the other one is Hucho bleekeri) (Li, 1984; Yue and Chen, 1998). In recent years, overexploitation, environmental pollution, dam constructions, and other reasons have caused a rapid reduction of B. lenok tsinlingensis populations in the wild (Ren and Liang, 2004), and rare fish can be found in the brook of the Qinling Mountains where far away from human activities, only in the region with altitude range from 1100 m to 2300 m (Yue and Chen, 1998; Ren and Liang, 2004; Gong et al., 2009). Therefore, the B. lenok tsinlingensis has been listed as a class II state protected wild animal in China Red Data Book of Endangered Animals since 1998, because of highly sensitive to ecology environment and limited numbers in the wild (Yue and Chen, 1998; Zhao and Zhang, 2009).

Up to present, there have been some studies referring to genus Brachymystax, most of them focused on their early development, age and growth, and artificial propagation (Lee et al., 2001; Xu et al., 2010, 2015; Shi et al., 2012; Guo et al., 2016; Lee and Yoshizaki, 2016). Whereas little attention is paid to explore the taxonomic problem of genus Brachymystax fish. Hence, the problem of species or subspecies differentiation belonging to genus Brachymystax is still controversial. On the one hand, B. lenok tsinlingensis Li, 1966 (Qinling lenok) was described as a subspecies differ from B. lenok lenok (Pallas, 1773) (Li, 1966; Yue and Chen, 1998; Du et al., 2016), nevertheless, other ichthyologists considered that B. lenok tsinlingensis couldn’t be treated as a subspecies, just as the synonym of B. lenok lenok (Song and Fang, 1984; Wang, 1988; Huang et al., 1989; Qin and Wang, 1989; Zhang, 1995). On the other hand, B. lenok (Pallas, 1773) (sharp-snouted lenok) and B. tumensis Mori, 1930 ( blunt-snouted lenok) distributed in Amur River and its tributary were revised as two species of Brachymystax, because they were different in the shape and length of their snouts as well as a number of biological characters and karyotypes (Ma et al., 2005, 2009; Mou et al., 2006; Ma and Jiang, 2007; Froufe et al., 2008; Wang et al., 2010; Frolov et al., 2015). Thereafter, the taxonomic relationship among B. lenok, B. tumensis and B. lenok tsinlingensis is even more vague. For example, Wang (2011) thought B. lenok tsinlingensis was different from both B. lenok and B. tumensis. Ma et al. (2005) identified the morphological traits of B. lenok tsinlingensis were more similar to B. tumensis. Xing et al. (2015) even redefined and revalidated B. lenok tsinlingensis Li, 1966 as an independent species and named as Brachymystax tsinlingensis Li, 1966. Some non-Chinese scholars held that the Brachymystax distributed in Korea was also B. lenok tsinlingensis (Kim and Park, 2002; Jang et al., 2003).

However, rarely published studies have examined the morphological divergence or genetic diversity among the three of B. lenok tsinlingensis, B. lenok and B. tumensis (Xing et al., 2015; Du et al., 2016). The taxonomic boundary of them has been still vague, especially the taxonomic status of B. lenok tsinlingensis. It will affect the conservation of germplasm resources of this endangered wild fish and its further biological research.

Fish morphological variation is the most intuitive adaptability change to specific habitat conditions. The morphological characteristics of fish are affected by genetic and environmental factors, which are important basis for species identification and species classification (Kinsey et al., 1994). Morphometrics is a good research method that specialized in the shape variation and its co-variation with other variables (Bookstein, 1991). As the revolution of morphometrics, geometric morphometric method combined with multivariate statistical analysis could capture the overall morphological changes of shape, avoid the loss of information of specimens structure and consider the global anatomic context (Rohlf and Marcus, 1993; Adams et al., 2004; Slice, 2007), which could express accurately the characteristics of biological form and provide the complete information for shape of the individuals, comparing with traditional morphometric analysis based on the relation between linear dimensions taken from two anatomical landmarks (Rezić et al., 2017; Strauss and Bookstein, 1982). Due to its obvious advantages, geometric morphometrics is widely applied on hydrocole to analysis the relationship between morphology and habitat (Zimmermann et al., 2012; Idaszkin et al., 2013; Foster et al., 2015), growth stages and shape (Frédérich and Vandewalle, 2011), morphological differences among geographic populations (Fruciano et al., 2011; Braga et al., 2017), as well as between species or subspecies (Tofilski, 2008; Addis et al., 2010; Stange et al., 2016).

In the present paper, the landmark-based geometric morphometrics was used to investigate the morphometric variation of the genus Brachymystax in China, which had been recognized as different species (B. lenok and B. tumensis) or subspecies (B. lenok tsinlingensis) in previous studies. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the taxonomic status of three morphotypes of genus Brachymystax, especially the subspecies validation of B. lenok tsinlingensis in Qinling, based on shape data.

 

 

Materials and methods

Sampling

All specimens (n=169) of genus Brachymystax were collected with a gill net from August 2014 to June 2017 in three different locations from Shaanxi and Heilongjiang Province of China. Sampling sites located at Heihe River (more than 1100 m altitude), Amur River (about 170 m altitude) and Ussuri River (a tributary of Amur River; about 83 m altitude) (Fig. 1). All samples were stored initially on wet ice and frozen immediately after catching, and preserved in the laboratory of Northwest A&F University, Yangling, China, after transportation. Taxonomic identification of all specimens were on the basis of characteristics of morphological traits (i.e., snout shape, body color and colour spots) and geographical distribution following Ma et al.(2005), Wang (2008) and Gong et al. (2009). These specimens recognized as three morphotypes (B. lenok, B. tumensis and B. lenok tsinlingensis). The average body length and weight of B. lenok was 21.75 ± 3.87 cm and 188.12 ± 99.11 g; the average body length and weight of individuals for B. tumensis was 34.43 ± 2.69 cm and 550.17 ± 132.83 g; the average body length and weight of examined samples of B. lenok tsinlingensis was 15.44 ± 2.83 cm and 49.58 ± 28.98 g. More detailed sampling information was showed in Table I.

Geometric morphometric data collection

The absolutely thawed fish were laid in a straight horizontal position on a polystyrene board and photographed the left side of each fish with a Nikon 60D digital camera (Nikon Ltd., Japan), while using a straightedge as scale. The fins were stretched out and fixed with pins. All raw images were further processed using the tpsUtil v.1.70 (Rohlf, 2016). Eighteen landmarks were placed and computed scale factors in each image of sample to describe the body shape changes (Fig. 2). These unambiguously identified landmarks (e.g. where the fins join the body) were predominantly type 1 to 2 landmarks as defined by Bookstein (1990), which represented significant skeletal or structural features (Helland et al., 2009; Arbour et al., 2010). To remove the bending effects of samples owing to preservation, the ‘unbending landmarks’ procedure was applied in tpsUtil, and three additional unbending landmarks (landmark 19, 20 and 21; removed before analysis) were digitized for that reason, which were in the middle of the line, respectively (Fig. 2). The coordinates of 21 landmarks were digitized using tpsDig2.0 (Rohlf, 2016) for each specimen. The new coordinates (X, Y) were calculated after removing the “unbending landmarks” by tpsUtil. Finally, new coordinates data was tested and confirmed the suitability for further analysis, using tpsSmall v.1.33 (Ristovska et al., 2008; Rohlf, 2015).

 

Table I.- Locations and number of samples of each morphotype.

Morphotypes

Locations

Sample size

Body length (cm)

Weight (g)

Ussuri River

Amur River

Heihe River

Mean±SD

Mean±SD

B. lenok

8

32

-

40

21.75±3.87

188.12±99.11

B. tumensis

71

-

-

71

34.43±2.69

550.17±132.83

B. lenok tsinlingensis

-

-

58

58

15.44±2.83

49.58±28.98

 

 

Geometric morphometric analysis

All non-shape related variation in scale effects, orientation, and translation were removed from the dataset by means of a Generalised Procrustes analysis (GPA) (Adams et al., 2004; Slice, 2007) until its position minimized the shape difference between specimens based on unbending energy (Haas, 2011). In this method, landmark configurations are superimposed by least squares optimisation and the process is iterated to compute the mean shape (Braga et al., 2017). After Procrustes superimposition, shape differences can be analyzed by the differences between Procrustes coordinates. Centroid size (CS), which is calculated as the square root of the sum of the squared deviations of landmarks from a centroid for each specimen, was used as a size proxy (Zelditch et al., 2012). The main tendencies in shape variation between samples within species were summarized through a principal component analysis (PCA) of the variance-covariance matrix of the Procrustes coordinates (Slice, 2007). Canonical variate analysis (CVA) was also used to visualize body shape changes that discriminated among groups (Klingenberg and Monteiro, 2005). CVA computes axes of variance in a way that minimized within-group differences and maximized between-group differences. Discriminant function analysis (DFA) is to determine classification functions by Fisher’s classification rule, followed by canonical analysis. Cross validation test was used to verify the accuracy of DFA method. The significance of differences among group means was tested through permutation tests with 10,00 permutations rounds, and meanwhile appeared the Procrustes distances and Mahalanobis distances among groups. All subsequent morphometric analyses were performed in the MorphoJ 1.06d (Klingenberg, 2011).

 

RESULTS

 

Morphological variation of average shape of each morphotype

The least-squares criterion regression analyses showed that the regression coefficient of the Tangent distance (y-axis) and the Procrustes distance (x-axis) was 0.99, indicating that the selected eighteen landmarks were valid and could be used for further analysis.

 

 

Four types of graphs were provided to visualize the morphological changes associated with the statistical results by MorphoJ. In the present study, wireframes graphs and transformation grids displayed that the morphological differences among three morphotypes of Brachymystax were mainly reflected in the changes of the head shape, the snout shape and the width of dorsal-ventral orientation (Fig. 3A, B). B. lenok and B. lenok tsinlingensis were more stretch on dorsal-ventral orientation than B. tumensis. All samples of B. lenok showed the sharpest snout, tapered and narrow head. B. lenok tsinlingensis had wider and elongate head and the longest eye diameter. B. tumensis had blunt and round and short head, blunt snout and shortest diameter of the eye.

Morphological variation among three Brachymystax morphotypes

PCA of 18 landmarks morphometric variables for 169 samples with a priori classification (Table I) displayed overlap among three morphotypes. The first five PCs accounted for 72.99% of the body shape changes (PC1 31.52%, PC2 17.75%, PC3 9.66%, PC4 7.81% and PC5 6.25%) (Fig. 4A). The PCA results indicated that most individuals of B. tumensis and B. lenok tsinlingensis took negative values and positive values along PC1 in the morphospace plot, respectively. Samples of B. lenok were distributed randomly and showed a large overlap with the other two morphotypes. PC2 did not distinguish any of the morphotypes in the scatter plot. The least overlap between B. tumensis and B. lenok tsinlingensis was evident in the scatter plot of PC1 versus PC2 (Fig. 4B). The uppermost body shape changed along PC1 followed a dorsal-ventral orientation compression and stretching, as well as head length in the lateral view (Fig. 4C). The body height of the B. lenok tsinlingensis in Qinling was higher than that of B. lenok in Heilongjiang, and the head of the B. lenok morphotype was characterized more sharper than the other two.

 

 

Results of CVA revealed two canonical correlations and separated all the samples of each morphotype into three non-overlapping clouds of points. The two canonical correlations explained 100% of the observed variation among B. lenok, B. tumensis and B. lenok tsinlingensis (Fig. 5). The first canonical variable (CV1, 65.77%) mainly discriminated from B. lenok tsinlingensis and the other two morphotypes, which mainly manifested as B. lenok tsinlingensis exhibiting the most negative values and the other two morphotypes having positive values. The variables that contributed most to the CV1 were coordinates 5Y, 17X and 18X. The second canonical variable (CV2, 34.23%) mainly separated the groups of B. lenok and B. tumensis, the former group took values smaller than zero and the latter one took values larger than zero. The variables that contributed most to the CV2 were coordinates 1X, 1Y and 16X, 16Y. The most pronounced differences were presented in the results of CVA by comparison of shape data. The shape change in CV1 from one morphotype to another was reflected in a dorsal-ventral orientation compression and stretching. The mainly shape change in CV2 among different species was reflected in head shape.

DFA was also used to judge individuals classification. After the 10,00 permutation test using the T-square (P<0.0001), the discrimination function correctly reclassified all except six individuals in a cross-validation test, the proportions of correct reclassification were 90% to 98.6% (Table II). Additionally, the Procrustes distance and Mahalanobis distance between B. lenok tsinlingensis and B. tumensis were farthest (the former distance was 0.0351 and the latter was 7.3094), the distances between B. lenok tsinlingensis and B. lenok were in the middle (the former was 0.0308 and the latter was 6.8108), the distances between B. lenok and B. tumensis were the nearest (the former was 0.0199 and the latter was 5.9646).

 

Table II.- Discriminant function analysis of three Brachymystax morphotypes.

Predicted morphotypes

Discriminated morphotypes

B. lenok

B. tumensis

B. lenok tsinlingensis

Results of discriminant function
B. lenok

40(100%)

0

0

B. tumensis

0

71(100%)

0

B. lenok tsinlingensis

0

0

58(100%)

Results of cross-validation
B. lenok

36(90%)

4

0

B. tumensis

1

70(98.6%)

0

B. lenok tsinlingensis

1

0

57(98.3%)

The number outside of the parentheses represents discriminated samples, and the inside number means the discriminated proportions of samples that were correctly classified.

 

 

Discussion

 

Three morphotypes of Brachymystax had been collected from Heihe, Amur River and Ussuri River, and these morphotypes had different biological characteristics and life-history (Mou et al., 2006; Wang, 2008). The present study exhibited that three morphological types of B. lenok, B. tumensis and B. lenok tsinlingensis, whose shape was coherent with morphological description in previous research (Li, 1966; Ma et al., 2005; Gong et al., 2009; Xing et al., 2015), differed significantly in body shape along the dorsal-ventral orientation, head morphology and snout shape, and eye diameter. Morphologically, all results of geometric morphometric analysis have shown that they belong to three different lineages.

Relationship of morphological variation and elevation habitats

Compared with other vertebrates, fish morphological characteristics are more diverse within or among populations, and more susceptible to the environmental influences (Wimberger, 1992). Salmonidae fishes originated from the north frigid zone of Eurasia, and all Salmonidae species distributed in China are thought to be the residual fishes after the glacial epoch (Li, 1984). B. lenok tsinlingensis, a landlocked salmon, is sealed off and stagnated in mountain streams with deglaciation (Song and Fang, 1984). Therefore, the Brachymystax fish from Qinling and from Amur River have been separated into two geographical populations approximately 200 million years ago and guaranteed reproductive isolation (Du, 2012; Du et al., 2016). Obviously, the morphological variation of genus Brachymystax that distributed in Shaanxi and Heilongjiang Province are closely related to geographic isolation.

According to our results and the different altitude habitats of Brachymystax, we can divide all samples into two geographically isolated groups. One group is the high-altitude habitat (B. lenok tsinlingensis, more than 1100 meters) and another is the low-altitude habitat (B. lenok and B. tumensis, below 200 meters). PCA has shown the overlap in varying degree among three morphotypes, but the minimum overlap appeared somewhere in B. lenok tsinlingensis and B. tumensis. The similar findings of PCA have also been occurred in the morphometric variation analysis of other vertebrates, such as Trinomys and ariia catfish (Dalapicolla and Leite, 2015; Stange et al., 2016). The results of CVA had showed that the specimens of high-altitude group were completely divided from the low-altitude group at CV1 axis without overlap. The DFA also got the same results, the Procrustes distance and Mahalanobis distance between B. lenok tsinlingensis and B. tumensis were farther than the distances between B. tumensis and B. lenok, and the Procrustes distance and Mahalanobis distance between B. lenok tsinlingensis and B. lenok were also bigger than the distances between B. tumensis and B. lenok. In other words, the shape variation of specimens between high- and low-altitude habitat is significant difference (P<0.0001). Maximal differences were observed in dorsaventral orientation and the head form in which B. lenok tsinlingensis had a wider dorsaventral orientation and the eye diameter longer than those from the group at low-altitude habitat, and the posterior end of the upper jaw (the 16th landmark) is below the center of the eye. These differences demonstrated that the body shape of B. lenok tsinlingensis was significantly more different comparing with B. lenok and B. tumensis which from Heilongjiang Province and reinforced the results of a recent multivariate morphometric study of Brachymystax in China that suggested the B. lenok tsinlingensis were neither the synonym of B. lenok nor the synonym of B. tumensis (Xing et al., 2015).

Previous studies explored the validity of B. lenok tsinlingensis was based on comparing the isozymes or some meristic characters, such as, the number of gill rakers, the lateral-line scales and the pyloric caeca. The comparison results showed there was a narrow overlap, but clearly existed differences in these characters among B. lenok tsinlingensis and lenoks without specifying the sharp or blunt snout (Song and Fang, 1984; Wang, 1988; Qin and Wang, 1989). The number of gill rakers was considered to be a highly heritable trait (Svärdson, 1979) and the number of the lateral-line scales which was genetically regulated was also effective for the differentiation of the populations (Bochkarev et al., 2017). Genetic research results using populations markers (e.g., mitochondrial control region and cytochrome b) also supported there were significant differentiation of lenoks between geographical populations from Qinling and Amur River (Xia et al., 2005, 2006). Our study of the body shape variation in Brachymystax belonging to different geographical populations in China allowed us to identify a different pattern of shape evolution.

Taxonomic status among three morphotypes of genus Brachymystax

Many early studies on the classification of genus Brachymystax in China included two fields, one is to explore whether the subspecies is exist or the validity of subspecies (without considering snout shape within populations) and another is to analysis two new sympatric species, sharp-snouted lenok (B. lenok) and blunt-snouted lenok (B. tumensis), from Amur River basin. However, few studies paid attention to the relationship of three distinct lineages in genus Brachymystax in China (Xing et al., 2015; Du et al., 2016). Morphological variation for three morphological types have been quantified in China only utilizing traditional morphometric analysis (Xing et al., 2015). In the present study, analyses of morphological differences using landmark-based geometric morphometric analysis indicated that B. lenok tsinlingensis, B. lenok and B. tumensis were differentiated by particular body shape. The relatively distinct morphological characters of sharp-snouted and blunt-snouted lenok in our study is consistent with previous reports of morphological characters of lenoks distributing in Amur River basin (Ma et al., 2005; Froufe et al., 2008). These two also differ significantly in their biological characters and independent spawning sites, which may guarantee reproductive isolation in sympatry (Mou et al., 2006; Froufe et al., 2008).

Lenoks distributing in the Qinling Mountains has been considered as blunt-snouted lenok based on external morphology (Ma et al., 2005), and B. lenok tsinlingensis was placed together with B. tumensis (Shed’ko and Shed’ko, 2003). Moreover, B. lenok tsinlingensis is considered as a synonym of B. lenok (Pallas, 1773), and the genus Brachymystax included only three currently recognized valid species: B. lenok (Pallas, 1773), B. tumensis Mori, 1930, and B. savinovi Mitrofanov, 1959 (Froese and Pauly, 2014). The results of the above studies were contrary to the results of our study about B. lenok tsinlingensis. Our results demonstrated that B. lenok tsinlingensis had more significant shape difference from both B. lenok and B. tumensis than the shape difference between B. lenok and B. tumensis in head shape, the eye diameter and the position of posterior end of the upper jaw.

Ma et al. (2009) had even synonymized B. tumensis in Tumen River with B. lenok based on mitochondrial control region sequence which indicated only slightly more inter-specific genetic divergence (2.2%) than the intra-specific variation recorded for B. tumensis (1.2%) in China, and the blunt-snouted lenok was considered as Brachymystax sp. B. tumensis was still temporarily adopted in the present study. The complete mitochondrial genomes were sequenced and the level of divergence inferred from 12 protein-coding genes showed close proximity between sharp-snouted lenok and B. lenok tsinlingensis, but clear species boundaries between the blunt-snouted lenok and both sharp-snouted lenok and Qinling lenok (Si et al., 2012; Balakirev et al., 2016). In addition, karyotypes analysis showed these two forms have different chromosome number, and B. lenok karyotype were 2n=90 with two cytotypes (I: NF=110; III: NF=106~136), B. tumensis karyotype has 2n=92 and NF=116 (Kartavtseva et al., 2013), and the silver-staining exhibited a certain difference between B. lenok and B. tumensis karyotypes (Frolov et al., 2015). The obtained karyotypic difference also strongly supported B. lenok and B. tumensis from Amur River basin were different species. The results of morphological analyses in our study, as well as the results based on molecular analysis (i.e. mitochondrial control region and microsatellites) and chromosomal study of the lenoks in previous research supported the validity of the species status of sharp-snouted and blunt-snouted lenok. Though, the lenok from Yellow Sea basin (the Luan He River in China) examined herein also has the same karyotype as B. tumensis (Kartavtseva et al., 2013). However, there are no karyotype data of B. lenok tsinlingensis in Qinling with aid to judge taxonomic status.

In other respects, researchers have proved a differentiation among these three lenoks, the subspecies validity of B. lenok tsinlingensis was determined by the partial sequence of the mitochondrial control region fragment (Du et al., 2016). Based on cytochrome b gene analyses, B. lenok tsinlingensis was thought as an independent species, renamed as B. tsinlingensis, and B. tsinlingensis has a significant genetic divergence from B. lenok (0.020~0.022) and B. tumensis (0.034), respectively, and the above values were larger than the interspecific genetic divergence (ranged from 0.008 to 0.011) among Hucho taimen, H. hucho and H. bleekeri (Xing et al., 2015). The clustering results of molecular phylogenetic trees from Xing et al. (2015) were consistent with our morphological results and conclusions. Therefore, it was speculated that B. lenok tsinlingensis was an independent species.

 

Conclusion

 

The present study provided morphological data that will help in the correct identification of Brachymystax in China. The landmark-based morphological analysis showed that B. lenok tsinlingensis, B. lenok and B. tumensis are characterized by significant differences from each other, which differ mainly in the head form, snout shape and the diameter of eye and the height of the dorsiventral orientation and the location of the posterior end of the upper jaw. Moreover, we speculated that the B. lenok tsinlingensis may be an independent species, but this required further evidences of molecular analysis, such as genetic diversity of mitochondrial DNA sequences and microsatellites to improve our understanding of the taxonomic status of genus Brachymystax fish.

 

Acknowledgements

 

We are grateful to Jilong Wang and Fengjiang Wen for their great help for the samples collection. This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31302189; 31702344), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (QN2013027), the Specialized Research Fund for the Doctoral Program of Higher Education of China (20100146120012) and Shaanxi Science & Technology Co-ordination & Innovation Project (2015KTTSNY01-01).

 

Statement of conflict of interest

Authors have declared no conflict of interest.

 

References

 

Adams, D.C., Rohlf, F.J. and Slice, D.E., 2004. Geometric morphometrics: Ten years of progress following the ‘revolution’. Ital. J. Zool., 71: 5-16. https://doi.org/10.1080/11250000409356545

Addis, P., Melis, P., Cannas, R., Secci, M., Tinti, F., Piccinetti, C. and Cau, A., 2010. A morphometric approach for the analysis of body shape in bluefin tuna: Preliminary results. Collect. Vol. Sci. Pap. ICCAT, 65: 982-987.

Arbour, J.H., Hardie, D.C. and Hutchings, J.A., 2010. Morphometric and genetic analyses of two sympatric morphs of Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) in the Canadian High Arctic. Can. J. Zool., 89: 19-30. https://doi.org/10.1139/Z10-100

Balakirev, E.S., Romanov, N.S. and Ayala, F.J., 2016. Complete mitochondrial genome of blunt-snouted lenok Brachymystax tumensis (Salmoniformes, Salmonidae). Mitochond. DNA A, 27: 882-883.

Bochkarev, N.A., Zuykova, E.I., Abramov, S.A., Podorozhnyuk, E.V. and Politov, D.V., 2017. The sympatric whitefishes Coregonus ussuriensis and C. chadary from the Amur River basin: Morphology, biology and genetic diversity. Fundam. appl. Limnol., 189: 193-207. https://doi.org/10.1127/fal/2016/0801

Bookstein, F.L., 1990. Introduction to methods for landmark data. In: Proceedings of the Michigan morphometrics workshop (eds. F.J. Rohlf and F.L. Bookstein). University of Michigan Museum of Zoology, pp. 215-226.

Bookstein, F.L., 1991. Morphometric tools for landmark data: Geometry and biology. Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, pp. 198.

Braga, R., Crespi-Abril, A.C., Van der Molen, S., Bainy, M.C.R.S. and Ortiz, N., 2017. Analysis of the morphological variation of Doryteuthis sanpaulensis (Cephalopoda: Loliginidae) in Argentinian and Brazilian coastal waters using geometric morphometrics techniques. Mar. Biodiv., 47: 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12526-017-0661-z

Dalapicolla, J. and Leite, Y.L.R., 2015. Taxonomic implications of morphological variation in three species of Trinomys (Rodentia: Echimyidae) from eastern Brazil. Zootaxa, 3919: 61-80. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3919.1.3

Du, H.B., 2012. Characteristics on the origin of Salmon fishes in the north and south of the Qinling Mountains. Henan Fish., 2: 5-7.

Du, Y.Y., Wang, T., Yang, W.S. and Shi, X.N., 2016. Discussion on species validity of Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis in Qinling Mountains. Gansu Anim. Vet. Med., 46: 122-126.

Foster, K., Bower, L. and Piller, K., 2015. Getting in shape: Habitat-based morphological divergence for two sympatric fishes. Biol. J. Linn. Soc., 114: 152-162. https://doi.org/10.1111/bij.12413

Frédérich, B. and Vandewalle, P., 2011. Bipartite life cycle of coral reef fishes promotes increasing shape disparity of the head skeleton during ontogeny: An example from damselfishes (Pomacentridae). BMC Evol. Biol., 11: 82. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-11-82

Froese, R. and Pauly, D., 2014. FishBase. World Wide Web Electronic Publication. Available from http://www.fishbase.org (accessed June 2017).

Frolov, S.V., Sakai, H. and Frolova, V.N., 2015. Karyotypes of the lenok genus Brachymystax from the Amur River basin-AgNORs are different between sharp-snouted and blunt-snouted lenoks. Chrom. Sci., 18: 59-62.

Froufe, E., Alekseyev, S., Alexandrino, P. and Weiss, S., 2008. The evolutionary history of sharp-and blunt-snouted lenok (Brachymystax lenok (Pallas, 1773)) and its implications for the paleo-hydrological history of Siberia. BMC Evol. Biol., 8: 40. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-8-40

Fruciano, C., Tigano, C. and Ferrito, V., 2011. Geographical and morphological variation within and between colour phases in Coris julis (L. 1758), a protogynous marine fish. Biol. J. Linn. Soc., 104: 148-162. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8312.2011.01700.x

Gong, D.J., Hou, F., Wu, H.C. and Hao, X., 2009. Distribution of the endemic fishes, Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis, in Gansu Province, China. B. Biol. Fr. Belg., 44: 11-12.

Guo, W., Shao, J., Li, P., Wu, J. and Wei, Q., 2016. Morphology and ultrastructure of Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis spermatozoa by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Tissue Cell, 48: 321-327. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tice.2016.05.009

Haas, T.C., 2011. Guide to the ‘Unbend specimens’ module in tpsUtil, Version 1.2. Avilable at: http://www.academia.edu/498700/Guide_to_the_Unbend_specimens_module_in_tpsUtil (Accessed on 20 January, 2018).

Helland, I., Vøllestad, L., Freyhof, J. and Mehner, T., 2009. Morphological differences between two ecologically similar sympatric fishes. J. Fish Biol., 75: 2756-2767. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8649.2009.02476.x

Huang, H.F., Luo, Z.T. and Liu, M.X., 1964. The discovery of Brachymystax lenok (Pallas) in Shaanxi, China. Chin. J. Zool., 5: 220-220.

Huang, H.M., Zhang, D.L., Zhuang, L.J. and Du, X.Y., 1989. Biological studies of Brachymystax lenok (Pallas) in the YaLu River. Acta Hydrobiol. Sin., 13: 160-169.

Idaszkin, Y., Márquez, F. and Nocera, A., 2013. Habitat-specific shape variation in the carapace of the crab Cyrtograpsus angulatus. J. Zool., 290: 117-126. https://doi.org/10.1111/jzo.12019

Jang, M.H., Lucas, M.C. and Joo, G.J., 2003. The fish fauna of mountain streams in South Korean national parks and its significance to conservation of regional freshwater fish biodiversity. Biol. Conserv., 114: 115-126. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0006-3207(03)00016-8

Kartavtseva, I., Ginatulina, L., Nemkova, G. and Shedko, S., 2013. Chromosomal study of the lenoks, Brachymystax (Salmoniformes, Salmonidae) from the South of the Russian Far East. J. Sp. Res., 2: 91-98. https://doi.org/10.12651/JSR.2013.2.1.091

Kinsey, S.T., Orsoy, T., Bert, T. and Mahmoudi, B., 1994. Population structure of the Spanish sardine Sardinella aurita: natural morphological variation in a genetically homogeneous population. Mar. Biol., 118: 309-317. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00349798

Kim, I.S. and Park, J.Y. (eds.), 2002. Freshwater fishes of Korea, Vol. 1. Kyo hak sa, Sŏul, pp. 465.

Klingenberg, C.P., 2011. MorphoJ: An integrated software package for geometric morphometrics. Mol. Ecol. Resour., 11: 353-357. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1755-0998.2010.02924.x

Klingenberg, C.P. and Monteiro, L.R., 2005. Distances and directions in multidimensional shape spaces: implications for morphometric applications. Syst. Biol., 54: 678-688. https://doi.org/10.1080/10635150590947258

Lee, S. and Yoshizaki, G., 2016. Successful cryopreservation of spermatogonia in critically endangered Manchurian trout (Brachymystax lenok). Cryobiology, 72: 165-168. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cryobiol.2016.01.004

Lee, S.M., Kim, K.D., Park, H.G., Kim, C.H. and Hong, K.E., 2001. Protein requirement of juvenile Manchurian trout Brachymystax lenok. Fish. Sci., 67: 46-51. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1444-2906.2001.00197.x

Li, S.Z., 1966. On a new subspecies of fresh-water trout, Brachymystax lenok tsinlingesis, from Taipaishan, Shensi, China. Acta. Zootec. Sin., 3: 92-94.

Li, S.Z., 1984. Studied on the distribution of the Salmonid fishes in China. Chin. J. Zool., 3: 34-37.

Liu, Y.B., 1992. On Brachymystax lenok (Pallas) from the Yalu River, China. J. Northeast. Agric. Univ., 23: 31-34.

Ma, B. and Jiang, Z.F., 2007. Genetic diversity and relationship between two species of Brachymystax in Wusuli River revealed by microsatellites. J. Fish. Sci. China, 14: 39-45.

Ma, B., Jiang, Z.F. and Huo, T.B., 2009. Study on the taxonomic status of species of Brachymystax in Heilongjiang River and Tumen River systems based on mitochondrial control region sequence. Acta Zootax. Sin., 34: 499-506.

Ma, B., Yin, J.S. and Li, J.P., 2005. Comparative studies on morphology and taxonomic position of two species of lenok. Acta Zootax. Sin., 30: 257-260.

Mou, Z.B., Liu, W. and Xu, G., 2006. Study on comparative biology of two species lenok (Brachymystax lenok) in Ussuri River. Chinese J. Fish., 19: 1-8.

Qin, S.Z. and Wang, S.A., 1989. Studies on the subspecies of Brachymystax lenok (Pallas), China. Salmon Fish., 1: 006.

Ren, J. and Lang, G., 2004. Resource survey report of Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis in Qianhe river valleys of Qinling mountains. J. Shaanxi Norm. Univ. (Nat. Sci. Ed.), 32: 165-168.

Rezić, A., Bošković, I., Lubinu, P., Piria, M., Florijančić, T., Scandura, M. and Šprem, N., 2017. Dimorphism in the skull form of golden jackals (Canis aureus Linnaeus, 1758) in the Western Balkans: A geometric morphometric approach. Pakistan J. Zool., 49: 989-997.

Ristovska, M., Spirovski, Z., Huysentruyt, F. and Adriaens, D., 2008. Shape changes in the external morphology during early development of the Ohrid trout (Salmo letnica Karaman, 1924). In: Congress of the Balkan Water Observation and Information System for Decision Support, pp. 1-10.

Rohlf, F.J. and Marcus, L.F., 1993. A revolution morphometrics . Trends Ecol. Evol., 8: 129-132. https://doi.org/10.1016/0169-5347(93)90024-J

Rohlf, F.J., 2015. tpsSmall, ver. 1.33. Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY.

Rohlf, F.J., 2016. tpsDig2, ver. 2.25. Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY.

Rohlf, F.J., 2016. tpsUtil, ver. 1.70. Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY.

Shed’ko, S.V. and Shed’ko., M.B., 2003. New data on freshwater ichthyofauna of the south of Far East of Russia. Lectures in Memory of V. Ya. Levanidov, 2: 320-333.

Shi, D.L., Wei, Q.W., Sun, Q.L., Li, L.X. and Du, H., 2012. Early ontogenesis of Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis. J. Fish. Sci. China, 19: 557-567.

Si, S., Wang, Y., Xu, G., Yang, S., Mou, Z. and Song, Z., 2012. Complete mitochondrial genomes of two lenoks, Brachymystax lenok and Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis. Mitochond. DNA, 23: 338-340. https://doi.org/10.3109/19401736.2012.690749

Slice, D.E., 2007. Geometric morphometrics. Annu. Rev. Anthropol., 36: 261-281. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.34.081804.120613

Song, S.L. and Fang, S.M., 1984. Discussion of the subspecies of Salmonidae fishes, Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis Li, from Shannxi, China. J. Lanzhou Univ. (Nat. Sci. Ed.), 20: 92-95.

Stange, M., Aguirre-Fernández, G., Cooke, R.G., Barros, T., Salzburger, W. and Sánchez-Villagra, M.R., 2016. Evolution of opercle bone shape along a macrohabitat gradient: species identification using mtDNA and geometric morphometric analyses in neotropical sea catfishes (Ariidae). Ecol. Evol., 6: 5817-5830. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2334

Strauss, R.E. and Bookstein, F.L., 1982. The truss: Body form reconstructions in morphometrics. System. Biol., 31: 113-135. https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/31.2.113

Svärdson, G., 1979. Speciation of Scandinavian Coregonus. Inst. Freshw. Res. Drottingholm Rep., 57: 1-95.

Tofilski, A., 2008. Using geometric morphometrics and standard morphometry to discriminate three honeybee subspecies. Apidologie, 39: 558-563. https://doi.org/10.1051/apido:2008037

Wang, D., Xu, G.F., Liu, Y., Lu, T.Y. and Mou, Z.B., 2010. Assessing genetic diversity of the Brachymystax lenok and Brachymystax tumensis populations in Ussuri River. J. Shanghai Ocean Univ., 19: 19-23.

Wang, F., 2011. Research progress of Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis Li. Shaanxi J. agric. Sci., 05: 181-183.

Wang, H.Y., 1988. Research of Brachymystax and B. lenok (Pallas) from Northern area of Hebei. Salmon Fish., 1: 16-25.

Wang, S.A., 1990. Biological feature and distributive change of fine scale fish in north China. Salmon Fish., 3: 39-45.

Wang, Y.Z., 2008. Species characteristics and protective counter measures of Qinling lenok. Acta Ecol. Anim., 29: 103-105.

Wimberger, P.H., 1992. Plasticity of fish body shape. The effects of diet, development, family and age in two species of Geophagus (Pisces: Cichlidae). Biol. J. Linn. Soc., 45: 197-218. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8312.1992.tb00640.x

Xia, Y.Z., Chen, Y.Y. and Sheng, Y., 2006. Phylogeographic structure of lenok (Brachymystax lenok Pallas)(Salmoninae, Salmonidae) populations in water systems of eastern China, inferred from mitochondrial DNA sequences. Zool. Stud., 45: 190.

Xia, Y.Z., Sheng, Y. and Chen, Y.Y., 2005. DNA sequence variation in the mitochondrial control region of lenok ( Brachymystax lenok) populations in China. Biodiv. Sci., 14: 48-54. https://doi.org/10.1360/biodiv.050189

Xing, Y.C., Lv, B.B., Ye, E.Q., Fan, E.Y., Li, S.Y., Wang, L.X., Zhang, C.G. and Zhao, Y.H., 2015. Revalidation and redescription of Brachymystax tsinlingensis Li, 1966 (Salmoniformes: Salmonidae) from China. Zootaxa, 3962: 191-205. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3962.1.12

Xu, G.F., Wang, Y.Y., Han, Y., Liu, Y., Yang, Y.H., Yu, S.L. and Mou, Z.B., 2015. Growth, feed utilization and body composition of juvenile Manchurian trout, Brachymystax lenok (Pallas) fed different dietary protein and lipid levels. Aquacult. Nutr., 21: 332-340. https://doi.org/10.1111/anu.12165

Xu, G.F., Yin, J.S., Liu, Y., Li, Y.F. and Mou, Z.B., 2010. A preliminary study on technique of artificial reproduction between Hucho taimen (♀) and Brachymystax lenok (♂). J. Shanghai Ocean Univ., 19: 178-183.

Yue, P.Q. and Chen, Y.Y., 1998. China red data book of endangered animals (Pisces). Science Press, Beijing, Hong Kong, New York.

Zelditch, M.L., Swiderski, D.L. and Sheets, H.D., 2012. Geometric morphometrics for biologists: A primer. Academic Press.

Zhang, J.M., 1995. Fishes of Heilongjiang Province. Heilongjiang Science and Technology Press, Haerbin.

Zhao, Y.H. and Zhang, C.G., 2009. Threatened fishes of the world: Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis Li, 1966 (Salmonidae). Environ. Biol. Fish., 86: 11-12. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-008-9337-7

Zimmermann, G., Bosc, P., Valade, P., Cornette, R., Améziane, N. and Debat, V., 2012. Geometric morphometrics of carapace of Macrobrachium australe (Crustacea: Palaemonidae) from Reunion Island. Acta Zool-Stockholm, 93: 492-500. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1463-6395.2011.00524.x

To share on other social networks, click on any share button. What are these?

Pakistan Journal of Zoology

April

Pakistan J. Zool., Vol. 56, Iss. 2, pp. 503-1000

Featuring

Click here for more

Subscribe Today

Receive free updates on new articles, opportunities and benefits


Subscribe Unsubscribe