Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

DNA barcoding and species delimitation of the Old World tooth-carps, family Aphaniidae Hoedeman, 1949 (Teleostei: Cyprinodontiformes)

  • Hamid Reza Esmaeili ,

    Roles Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Software, Supervision, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing

    hresmaeili@shirazu.ac.ir

    Affiliation Ichthyology and Molecular Systematics Research Laboratory, Zoology Section, Department of Biology, College of Sciences, Shiraz University, Shiraz, Iran

  • Azad Teimori,

    Roles Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences, Shahid Bahonar University of Kerman, Kerman, Iran

  • Fatah Zarei,

    Roles Data curation, Formal analysis, Methodology, Software, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Ichthyology and Molecular Systematics Research Laboratory, Zoology Section, Department of Biology, College of Sciences, Shiraz University, Shiraz, Iran

  • Golnaz Sayyadzadeh

    Roles Data curation, Formal analysis, Methodology, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Ichthyology and Molecular Systematics Research Laboratory, Zoology Section, Department of Biology, College of Sciences, Shiraz University, Shiraz, Iran

Abstract

The fishes, which have currently named Aphanius Nardo, 1827 are the relict of the ancient ichthyofauna of the Tethys Sea. For a long time since 1827, the genus name has been subjected to revision by several researchers using mainly morphological features. Until recently, no comprehensive single- or multi-locus DNA barcoding study has been conducted on whole members of the family Aphaniidae. In the present study, by applying four conceptually different molecular species delimitation methods, including one distance-based method, one network-based and two topology-based methods, we examined a single-locus DNA barcode library (COI) diversity for the 268 sequences within the family Aphaniidae from the Old World (57 sequences are new in the present study and 211 sequences were retrieved from NCBI database). The molecular analyses revealed a clearer picture of intra-family relationships and allowed us to clarify the generic names, and also describe a new genus for the family Aphaniidae. Results supported distinction of three major clades related to three genera within this family: i) the first clade includes the A. mento group which are placed in a new genus, Paraphanius gen. nov., found in the Orontes (= Asi) and Tigris-Euphrates River drainage, the Levant in coastal waters and the Dead Sea basin, western Jordan, and in southern Turkey in the Mediterranean basins as well as in central Turkey. This clade positioned at the base of the phylogenetic tree, (ii) the second clade contains the A. dispar-like brackish water tooth-carps which are transferred to the genus Aphaniops Hoedeman, 1951 (type species, Lebias dispar), distributed in the coastal waters around the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf basins; and (iii) the third clade, the genus Aphanius Nardo, 1827 (type species Aphanius nanus = A. fasciatus) contains all the inland and inland-related tooth-carps, which are mainly distributed in the inland waters in Turkey and Iran and also in the inland-related drainages around the Mediterranean basin.

Introduction

Morphological characters have long been used to describe and identify fish species. Nevertheless, it is known that traditional methods based on morphological properties often do not allow the discovery of cryptic species, frequently leading to taxon misidentification, instability in the number of species and an insufficient indication of the loss of genetic diversity. Since all fields of biology depend on the convenient species identification [1, 2], the species delimitation needs to be efficient and reliable.

DNA barcoding based on the partial nucleotide sequences of the cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) gene has been increasingly used as one of the principal approaches in the bio-identification system of animals [3]. Almost all species can be distinguished by their COI sequences only if the average intraspecific and interspecific genetic distances are significantly different (barcoding gap) [4, 5].

The most important benefits of DNA barcoding are its accuracy to distinguish closely related species, identifying individuals at different developmental stages, discovering cryptic species and to identify the possible causes of synonymies. Therefore, over recent decades, this technology has had a principal contribution to the reliable identification of species [6, 7].

The Old World Cyprinodontiformes (now in the genus Aphanius Nardo, 1827), including the extant and fossil species, are widely distributed along the late-period Tethys Sea coastlines. It is known that differences in the Mediterranean Sea level created by glacial and interglacial conditions have largely affected their present-day distribution. Since the tooth-carp fishes are not highly diverse in external morphology, therefore, primary morphological attempts were not quite successful for species identification. For this reason, the systematics of these fishes has been the subject of many studies since the first description of the Aphanius species in 1821 by Valenciennes.

What is Aphanius Nardo, 1827?

The fishes that have currently named Aphanius Nardo, 1827 (ref. 1827a, pp. 34, 39–40; also published in 1827b, col. 487), are the relict of the ancient ichthyofauna of the Tethys Sea. These fishes first appeared in the middle to late Aquitanian. The oldest records, described based on the otolith morphology are from Germany (the Mainz Basin) and SW France (the Aquitaine Basin), 'genus Cyprinodontidarum' [= Aphanius] angulosus Steurbaut, 1978) (cf. Reichenbacher 2000). Aphanius princeps, found in the deposits of the Burdigalian age in Catalonia, NE Spain, is the taxon with the oldest fossil skeleton [8].

The genus Aphanius was the only native representative of the family Aphaniidae in the Old World formerly considered to be in the family Cyprinodontidae [9, 1012]. It was Sethi [13] who for the first time, advocated placing Aphanius in a distinct family, Aphaniidae, however, this suggestion did not find general acceptance. Typically, the name Aphanius refers to a genus of fresh and brackish water tooth-carps with a wide distribution, basically peri-Mediterranean, extending from the Mediterranean basin including Portugal and Morocco to the Persian Gulf and its eastern regions, including Pakistan and India [9, 1418]. These fishes are generally small (up to 70 mm long) thriving in coastal and brackish water environments, the inland and land-locked water systems such as spring-stream systems, hot sulphuric springs, and rarely wetlands [16, 1923].

Systematics and nomenclature history.

Since 1827, the genus name has been subjected to revision by several researchers (see Kottelat and Wheeler [24]) and it has been widely used since at least 1926. Originally, the genus was established with two nominal species Aphanius nanus Nardo, 1827 and Aphanius fasciatus Nardo, 1827 from the Mediterranean waters. Later A. nanus was selected as a junior synonym of Lebias fasciata Valenciennes in Cuvier & Valenciennes, 1827 (Jordan [25], p. 121). The type species, therefore, becomes "fasciatus", now A. fasciatus by the subsequent designation of Jordan [25].

Aphanius has been named by some authors as a junior synonym of Lebias Goldfuss, 1820 [26]. It should be noted that for more than 150 years Lebias had been considered as a junior synonym of Cyprinodon Lacépède, 1803. However, with a single exception in 1895, it remained unused since 1846. In addition, Hoedeman [27] has examined four specimens of the genus Tellia from the collection in the Paris Museum and proposed that Tellia should not be separated from Aphanius, while Aphanius dispar is quite well separable from Aphanius. Therefore, a new generic name Aphaniops (“Aphaniops = Aphanius-opsis; resembling Aphanius”, anticipated by Hoedeman [27]) was proposed for A. dispar. The new genus Aphaniops Hoedeman, 1951 was based on the following characters; having no dermal sheath around the anterior anal-fin rays, presence of 8−9 dorsal-fin rays in Aphaniops versus 10−14 dorsal-fin rays in Aphanius, 7−8 pelvic-fin rays in Aphaniops in contrast to 5−7 pelvic-fin rays in Aphanius. Accordingly, he provided the following key for the discrimination of Aphanius from Aphaniops:

  1. “Dorsal fin with 8–9 rays, ventral fins well developed with 7–8 rays, no dermal sheath around the anterior anal rays, and length up to 80 mm. Genus Aphaniops.
  2. Dorsal fin with 10–14 rays; ventral fins well developed, rudimentary or entirely wanting, with 5–7 rays if present, the presence of the dermal sheath around first few anal rays, naked or covered with scales, and length up to 65 mm. Genus Aphanius”.

Also, according to Parenti [28], Aphanius mento possesses several diagnostic features not found in other members of the genus Aphanius, including a cartilaginous interhyal (ossified in other Aphanius species), an embedded urohyal (not embedded in other Aphanius), an upturned lower jaw (not upturned in other Aphanius species), and a distinctive neuromast pattern on the dorsal surface of the head (less prominently developed in other Aphanius species). As a result, she interpreted A. mento as the derived member of the Aphanius clade that should be designated as “Aphanius”. This taxonomic separation corresponds to the observation of the sulcus morphology of sagittal otolith in the study of Reichenbacher et al. [29]. In the following, the list of synonyms is provided for the genus Aphanius:

Aphanius Nardo, 1827. Synonym of Lebias Goldfuss 1820, according to Lazara [30, 26]. Valid as Aphanius Nardo 1827, according to Tortonese [31], Parenti [28], Wildekamp et al. [32], Coad [33], Kruppand Schneider [34], Wildekamp [16], Poll & Gosse [35], Seegers [36], Wildekamp et al. [23], Doadrio et al. [37], Huber [38], Blanco et al. [39], Hrbek et al. [40], Kottelat et al. [41], Kottelat & Freyhof [42], Hertwig [43], Coad [44], Teimori et al. [45], Esmaeili et al. [46], Teimori et al. [47], Esmaeili et al. [19], Gholami et al. [48], Keivany & Esmaeili [49], Esmaeili et al. [50], Teimori et al. [51], Pfleiderer et al. [52], Huber [53], Jouladeh-Roudbar et al. [54], Esmaeili et al. [55], Freyhof et al. [9, 10], Çiçek et al. [56], Esmaeili et al. [57], Golani & Fricke [58], Teimori et al. [15, 59], Yoğurtçuoğlu & Freyhof [60], Teimori & Motamedi [61], and Motamedi et al. [62].

Anatolichthys Kosswig & Sözer, 1945. Valid subgenus, according to Lazara [30].

Anatolichthys splendens Kosswig & Sözer, 1945.

Synonym of Kosswigichthys Sözer, 1942, according to Parenti [28]. Synonym of Aphanius Nardo, 1827, according to Wildekamp [16], Wildekamp et al. [23], a synonym of Lebias Goldfuss, 1820.

Aphaniops Hoedeman, 1951. Valid subgenus, according to Lazara [30].

Lebias dispar Rüppell, 1829.

Synonym of Lebias Goldfuss 1820. Synonym of Aphanius Nardo, 1827, according to Tortonese [31], Parenti [28], Wildekamp et al. [32], Krupp & Schneider [34], Wildekamp [16], and Wildekamp et al. [23].

Kosswigichthys Sözer, 1942. Valid subgenus, according to Lazara [30].

Kosswigichthys asquamatus Sözer,1942.

Synonym of Lebias Goldfuss 1820. Synonym of Aphanius Nardo, 1827, according to Wildekamp [16] and Wildekamp et al. [23].

Lebias Goldfuss, 1820. Lebias banded Valenciennes, 1821. Valid as Lebias Goldfuss, 1820, according to Lazara [26], Costa [63] and Lazara [30]. The invalid generic name, according to Huber [38].

Synonym of Aphanius Nardo, 1827, according to Parenti [28].

Micromugil Gulia, 1861. Valid subgenus, according to Lazara [30].

Synonym of Aphanius Nardo, 1827, according to Tortonese [31], Parenti [28], Wildekamp et al. [32], Wildekamp [16] and Wildekamp et al. [23]. Synonym of Lebias Goldfuss, 1820.

Tellia Gervais, 1853. Valid subgenus, according to Huber [38].

Synonym of Aphanius Nardo, 1827, according to Parenti [28], Wildekamp et al. [32], Wildekamp [16] and Wildekamp et al. [23]. Synonym of Lebias Goldfuss, 1820.

Turkichthys Ermin, 1946. Valid subgenus, according to Lazara [30].

Turkichthys transgrediens Ermin, 1946. Synonym of Aphanius Nardo, 1827, according to Wildekamp [16] and Wildekamp et al. [23]. Synonym of Lebias Goldfuss, 1820.

This background leads to the question: is Aphanius a monophyletic group? Parenti [28] has implied the paraphyly of Aphanius (the genus is probably not monophyletic). In addition, Nelson et al. [64] noted that the genus Aphanius probably is not a monophyletic group.

To date, 44 species have been described under the genus Aphanius [65]. The Near East, especially Iran and Turkey host the largest number of species [11, 16, 40, 44, 66]. As mentioned above, numerous authors have so far studied different aspects of these fishes, including the phenotypic variation, embryology, allopatric distribution, species diversity, historical zoogeography, evolutionary history and phylogenetic relationships [11, 23, 28, 6779]. Particularly, significant progress has been made during the past decade to reconstruct the phylogenetic relationships of Aphanius species in the Near East [10, 15, 1922, 40, 44, 4648, 50, 51, 8082]. Nevertheless, no comprehensive single- or multi-locus DNA barcoding study has been conducted for species delimitation in the family Aphaniidae.

In this study, by applying four conceptually different molecular species delimitation methods including one distance-based method, one network-based and two topology-based methods, we examined a single-locus DNA barcode library (COI) diversity for 268 sequences within the family Aphaniidae from the Old World (57 sequences are new in this study and 211 sequences retrieved from NCBI database). The aims of our study were (i) to use DNA barcoding as a tool for species delimitation within the family Aphaniidae, ii) to give a clearer picture of intra-family relationships and (iii) to clarify the generic names of the species group within the family. The DNA barcode records generated in this study are discussed by considering some morphological features of these fishes.

Materials and methods

Ethics statement

All fish species were caught in the inland water bodies (not national parks, other protected areas, or private areas, etc.), so no specific permissions were required for these locations/activities. Ethical approval was given by the Bioethics Committee of Biology Department, Shiraz University. Specimen collection and maintenance were performed in strict accordance with the recommendations of the Bioethics Committee of Biology Department, Shiraz University.

Sampling and external morphological identification

A total of 57 specimens belonging to 14 species were sampled from various localities in Iran by using a hand net (Fig 1, Table 1). After anesthesia with 1% clove oil solution, these specimens were kept in 96% ethanol for molecular studies. The fish individuals were identified in the laboratory by two authors (H.R. Esmaeili and A. Teimori) based on the external morphology and including coloration, their geographic distribution and also by considering their original species descriptions and recently published articles [19, 33, 40, 4448, 51, 83]. Meristic counts were done externally (not using cleared and stained specimens).

thumbnail
Fig 1. Overview of the distribution areas and the sampling sites of the tooth-carps from Iran.

The map was originally designed in DIVA-GIS ver. 7.5 (https://www.diva-gis.org/).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231717.g001

thumbnail
Table 1. New COI sequences for the tooth-carp species sampled from different drainage basins in Iran.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231717.t001

DNA extraction, PCR and sequencing

In a sterile condition, small fragments of the dorsal muscle from alcohol-preserved specimens were sampled and placed in 96-well Eppendorf PCR plates. Genomic DNA of 57 specimens belonging to morphologically identified species based on external characters was purified by extraction from tissues in the presence of high concentrations of Guanidinium Thiocyanate and passage of the extracts through a fiberglass membrane (AcroPrep 1 μM glass fiber; PALL 5051) as described by Vargas et al. [84]. The standard DNA barcode region for vertebrates (COI) was amplified using the primer pair named FishF1 (5’TCAACCAACCACAAAGACATTGGCAC3’) and FishR1 (5’TAGACTTCTGGGTGGCCAAAGAATCA3’) [4]. The amplification process was performed using Master Mix in a total volume of 25 μl containing 12.5 μl of a Ready 2X PCR Master Mix (Genetbio, Cat. no. G-2000), 0.5 μl of each primer (10 pmol/μl), 5 μl of the DNA template and 6.5 μl dd water. The amplification was performed on a Bioer XP Thermal Cycler (Bioer Technology Co. Ltd., Hangzhou, China), programmed as following: an initial denaturation at 94°C for 3 min, 35 cycles with denaturation at 94°C for 50 s, annealing at 52°C for 1min, and a final extension phase at 72°C for 5 min. After purification with the ExoASP-IT® (usb) kit, the PCR products were Sanger sequenced with BigDye® Terminator v3.1 Cycle Sequencing Kit (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) on an ABI PRISM 3730xl DNA Analyzer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) by the Macrogen Company of South Korea.

Phylogenetic reconstruction

For obtaining a reliable outcome, a total of 211 COI sequences [10, 67, 8588] from 28 Aphanius species were retrieved from GenBank and included in the phylogenetic analyses (Table 2). The goby killifish, Aphyosemion franzwerneri (Accession number: EF417044) was used as an outgroup. The BioEdit ver. 7.0.4 [89] was used to read the DNA chromatograms. The mtDNA sequences were first aligned with the ClustalW procedure implemented in MEGA ver. 7[90], and then were aligned manually. New sequences are deposited in NCBI Genbank (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) under accession numbers MT102153-MT102209. We examined the substitution saturation with DAMBE ver. 7.2.7 [91]. The nucleotide substitution model best fitting the COI barcode library for the genus Aphanius was obtained using Akaike and Bayesian information criteria (AIC & BIC), and a decision theory method (DT) in JModelTest ver. 2.1.3 [92]. All criteria suggested GTR+I+G as the best-fit model for the sequence set. For phylogenetic reconstruction, the Bayesian method was run based on four simultaneous runs of four Markov chains for 100,000,000 generations and a burn-in of 15% of the initial trees in MrBayes ver. 3.2.6 [93]. An ultrametric gene tree was generated using the uncorrelated lognormal relaxed clock model [94] and the birth-death model in BEAST ver.1.8.2 [95]. BEAUTi ver. 1.8.2 [95] was used to implement the run settings: 100 million chain length, sampling each 3000th tree, the uncorrelated lognormal relaxed clock, birth-death model and GTR+I+G substitution model with four gamma categories. Tracer ver. 1.6 [96] was used to test the appropriateness of parameters. The maximum age for Aphanius was set at 34 Ma based on the oldest known fossil of the Old World killifishes, Prolebias stenoura Sauvage, 1874 [97]. Results were visualized in Tree Annotator ver. 1.8.2[98] with a 10% burn-in rate, 95% highest posterior density of divergence times and under the maximum clade credibility option for the consensus tree. In addition, we generated a Maximum Likelihood (ML) tree with 3,000 bootstrap replicates using RAxML ver. 7.2.5 [99] under the GTR+I+G nucleotide substitution model, with fast bootstrap.

thumbnail
Table 2. Details of 211 COI sequences belonging to 28 Aphanius species acquired from the GenBank database.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231717.t002

Molecular species delimitation

Four molecular species delimitation methods were applied to reduce difficulties when using only single parameter estimates and to compare results of conceptually different approaches, including a distance-based method, a network-based, and two topology-based approaches. The Automatic Barcode Gap Discovery (ABGD) method [100] uses the distribution of pairwise differences to detect a barcode gap dividing hypothetical species in the sequence set by assuring that intraspecific and interspecific distances do not overlap. We tested a set of COI sequence of the studied tooth-carps on the ABGD web server (https://bioinfo.mnhn.fr/abi/public/abgd/) with a combination of ABGD settings within the parameter range of Pmin = 0.001, Pmax = 0.1 and gap width = 0.1–1.2, all for a total of 20 steps and applying a Kimura-2-parameter (K2P) [101] corrected genetic distance matrix calculated using MEGA ver. 7.0 [90]. The reversed Statistical Parsimony (SP) method [102] is a network-based system that delineates hypothetical species using the network topology. The TCS ver. 1.21 [103] software was used to calculate a statistical parsimony network. The haplotypes are clustered into two separate networks or species if the number of mutations between two neighboring haplotypes, being more than the connection probability. We used a 95% connection probability threshold to delineate hypothetical species. The Bayesian Poisson Tree Process (bPTP) approach [104] uses a tree topology to delineate species. It assumes that each mutation event has a non-null probability of forming a new species and, thus, the number of interspecific mutations is significantly higher than the number of intraspecific mutations. The bPTP server (https://species.h-its.org/ptp/) was used with a Bayesian topology produced in MrBayes ver. 3.2.6 as input tree. The analysis was run under default settings. The Bayesian General Mixed Yule-Coalescent (bGMYC) method [105] is conceptually similar to bPTP and uses a tree topology to infer species hypotheses, but unlike bPTP, it applies an ultrametric tree as an input file. This method implies that each node of a gene tree corresponds to one of these two possible events: (i) divergence between species after a strict Yule process [106]; or (ii) neutral coalescent events of lineages forming a species [107]. Since the rate of coalescent events is higher than speciation, it is possible to define a limit on a phylogenetic tree between interspecific and intraspecific divergence, delimiting clusters of specimens, which are genetically isolated, and independently evolving lineages or species. This analysis was performed using the bGMYC package [105] for R ver. 3.6.1 [108]on an ultrametric tree produced in BEAST ver. 1.8.2 as an input file.

Results

Molecular species delimitation

The final COI alignment included 268 sequences and one out-group sequence (i.e., Aphyosemion franzwerneri) trimmed to 609 bps. The nucleotide substitution pattern showed that the sequences have not reached substitution saturation and are therefore well applicable for phylogenetic analyses. The data were analyzed using the Bayesian Inference and Maximum Likelihood (ML) methods (Fig 2). All the nominal species were recovered as monophyletic except A. dispar (Rüppell, 1829), A. stiassnyae Getahun & Lazara, 2001 (from Ethiopia, Lake Afrera), A. pluristriatus (Jenkins, 1910), and A. fontinalis Aksiray, 1948 (from Turkey). The phylogenetic position of A. richardsoni (Boulenger, 1907), A. stiassnyae, A. kruppi, A. ginaonis and A. stoliczkanus made A. dispar a paraphyletic species. In addition, the phylogenetic position of A. sureyanus (Neu, 1937) made A. fontinalis paraphyletic. The clade formed by A. pluristriatus A. kavirensis, A. sophiae, Aphanius sp. and A. mesopotamicus is plagued with very low levels of interspecific sequence divergence (S1 Table), and low values of posterior probabilities and bootstraps (Fig 2).

thumbnail
Fig 2. Bayesian and Maximum Likelihood phylogeny reconstructed based on COI gene sequences visualizing the results of the four different molecular species delimitation Methods.

ABGD, Automatic Barcode Gap Discovery; SP, reversed Statistical Parsimony; bPTP, Bayesian Poisson tree process model; bGMYC, Bayesian General Mixed Yule-Coalescent model. Operational taxonomic unit (OTU) corresponding to the morphological or nominal species. The numbers before and after the slash at important nodes are posterior probability and bootstrap values, respectively (values lower than 0.5 and 50% are not shown at these nodes).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231717.g002

The four conceptually different molecular species delimitation methods revealed 35–48 species (Fig 2). The ABGD method delineated 40 species (Fig 2). Out of 40 nominal species, 26 (65%) were delimited through the ABGD tool. It indicated potential species-level diversity in five nominal species: A. dispar, A. kruppi, A. ginaonis, A. stoliczkanus, and A. anatoliae. ABGD presented the following groups of nominal species/sequences with low genetic diversity): (i) A. stiassnyae and A. dispar specimens from Lake-Assal (Djibouti), Afrera spring (North Ethiopia), Lake Abaeded (Ethiopia), Gali Colluli River (Eritrea), Zariga River (Eritrea), and Shukaray River (Eritrea; MF918580 and MF918579); (ii) A. arakensis, A. pluristriatus, A. kavirensis, A. sophiae, Aphanius sp. and A. mesopotamicus (all from Iran); and (iii) A. fontinalis and A. sureyanus.

The SP method delineated 35 species (Fig 2). Out of 40 morphologically identified species, 26 (65%) were delimited nicely through the SP tool. The SP analysis presented potential species-level diversity in two nominal species including A. dispar and A. anatoliae. This method also revealed low genetic diversity in the COI barcode region of the following species:(i) A. stiassnyae and A. dispar specimens from Lac-Assal (Djibouti), Afrera spring (North Ethiopia), Lake Abaeded (Ethiopia), Gali Colluli river (Eritrea), Zariga river (Eritrea), and Shukaray river (Eritrea; MF918580 and MF918579); (ii) A. ginaonis and A. stoliczkanus; (iii) A. arakensis, A. pluristriatus, A. kavirensis, A. sophiae, Aphanius sp. and A. mesopotamicus (all from Iran); and (iv) A. saldae, A. fontinalis, and A. sureyanus.

The bGMYC method split the dataset into 44 species (Fig 2). Out of 40 nominal species, 26 (65%) were delimited through the bGMYC tool. It presented potential species-level diversity in six nominal species: (i) two potential species in A. mento; (ii) five potential species in A. dispar; (iii) two potential species in A. ginaonis; (iv) two potential species in A. stoliczkanus; (v) two potential species in A. fasciatus; and (vi) two potential species in A. anatoliae. The bGMYC method is similar to bPTP, but it uses an ultrametric tree to delimit species. As no mutation rate has been reported for COI in genus Aphanius, the maximum age for Aphanius was set at 34 Ma based on the oldest known fossil of the Old World killifishes to produce an ultrametric tree. For this reason, and since credible intervals for some species-group nodes were broad (not shown), the bGMYC results should be cautionary interpreted.

Finally, the delimitation method based on bPTP yielded the largest number of species (48 species; Fig 2). Out of 40 nominal species, 21 (52.5%) were delimited through the bPTP tool. It indicated potential species-level diversity in 11 nominal species: (i) two potential species in A. alexandri; (ii) two potential species in A. mento; (iii) two potential species in A. sirhani; (iv) four potential species in A. dispar; (v) two potential species in A. kruppi; (vi) two potential species in A. ginaonis; (vii) two potential species in A. stoliczkanus; (viii) three potential species in A. fasciatus; (ix) two potential species in A. maeandricus; (x) two potential species in A. anatoliae; (xi) two potential species in A. saldae. This method considered low genetic distance in the COI barcode region for the following groups: (i) A. stiassnyae and A. dispar specimens from Lac-Assal (Djibouti), Afrera spring (North Ethiopia), Lake Abaeded (Ethiopia), Gali Colluli river (Eritrea), Zariga river (Eritrea), and Shukaray river (Eritrea; including MF918580 and MF918579); (ii) A. pluristriatus, A. kavirensis, A. sophiae, Aphanius sp. from Yazd and A. mesopotamicus; and (iii) A. fontinalis and A. sureyanus.

Overall, 28 of 35–48 putative species delimited by the four molecular species delimitation approaches could be morphologically linked to a species name by at least one method, as follows (Fig 2): A. orontis, Aphanius sp. from Syria, A. mentoides, A. alexandri, A. similis, A. mento, A. furcatus, A. sirhani, A. richardsoni, A. kruppi, A. apodus, A. vladykovi, A. shirini, A. isfahanensis, A. darabensis, A. farsicus, A. arakensis, A. saourensis, A. iberus, A. baeticus, A. almiriensis, A. fasciatus, A. villwocki, A. maeandricus, A. meridionalis, A. iconii, A. saldae and A. transgrediens. Overall, 10 nominal species represented a high level of diversity by at least one of the four molecular species delimitation methods: A. alexandri, A. mento, A. sirhani, A. dispar, A. kruppi, A. ginaonis, A. stoliczkanus, A. fasciatus, A. maeandricus, and A. anatoliae.

In this study, the average K2P genetic distance between a group containing A. mento versus a group containing brackish water taxa was 17%, while the average K2P genetic distance between a group containing A. mento versus a group containing the inland and inland-related taxa was 19.6% (Table 3). The mean K2P genetic distances within the brackish water group, within the inland and inland-related group, and within the A. mento group were 3.7% (S.E. = 0.4%), 13.1% (S.E. = 1%) and 4.8% (S.E. = 0.5%), respectively (Table 4).

thumbnail
Table 3. Mean K2P distances (%) between three groups of the Old World tooth-carps.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231717.t003

thumbnail
Table 4. Mean of the within group K2P distance (%) for the Old World tooth-carps.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231717.t004

Paraphanius gen. nov. Esmaeili, Teimori, Zarei & Sayyadzadeh

(Fig 3)

thumbnail
Fig 3. Paraphanius mento, male, Spring of Barada (provided by J. Freyhof).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231717.g003

Diagnosis.

Paraphanius can be distinguished from the other genera of Aphaniidae, Aphanius (Fig 4) and Aphaniops (Fig 5) by considering the following characteristics: unique colour pattern of breeding males being dark blue-black to dark brown or almost black with iridescent blue-white to silvery spots regularly-arranged on the fins as curved lines, and irregularly on the body (sometimes as irregular vertical bars and sometimes the spots are vertically elongate), the absence of the wide and black bars on the caudal fin of the male (vs. the presence of 3 wide black bars on the caudal fin of the male in Aphaniops), the absence of vertical bands on the body of the male, (the presence of vertical bars in the male of Aphanius), a higher number of dorsal fin rays than in Aphaniops (9–14 in Paraphanius vs. 8–9 in Aphaniops), a cartilaginous interhyal (versus ossified in Aphanius and Aphaniops), an embedded urohyal in the fold of branchiostegal membranes (versus not embedded in Aphanius and Aphaniops), an upturned lower jaw (versus not upturned in Aphanius and Aphaniops), and a distinctive neuromast pattern on the dorsal surface of the head (versus less prominently developed in Aphanius and Aphaniops) based on Parenti [28]. The epural is thin or less developed in Paraphanius, while it is thick and well developed in Aphanius and Aphaniops. Similar to Aphanius, the otolith in Paraphanius has a straight sulcus (versus a sulcus which is distinctly bent terminally in Aphaniops).

thumbnail
Fig 4. Aphanius pluristriatus, male, Mond River drainage, Iran.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231717.g004

thumbnail
Fig 5. Aphaniops stoliczkanus, male, Tigris River drainage, Ilam, Iran.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231717.g005

Remark.

It has been proposed that the Paraphanius group is more closely related to the Anatolian Kosswigichthys Sözer, 1942 and the South American Orestias Valenciennes in Cuvier and Valenciennes, 1846 than the genus Aphanius (Parenti [28]:524). However, Kosswigichthy is considered as a synonym of Aphanius Nardo, 1827 by Wildekamp [16]:19. In addition, according to osteological information provided by Parenti [28]:521, Aphaniidae is distinguished from Orestiidae by having a vomer (vs. absent), a cartilaginous mesethmoid (vs. ossified) and an ossified interhyal (not ossified). Based on the tree topology, populations from the Orontes (= Asi) and the Levant in coastal and Dead Sea basins should be considered as distinct taxa.

Based on the tree topology, A. alexandri, A. mento, A. mentoides, A. orontis, A. similis, and Aphanius sp. make a distinct clade sister to A. dispar plus A. fasciatus group. The validity of the A. mento group has been under debate. Akşiray [109] published the description of one new species and 15 new subspecies of Aphanius from Turkey. However, Villwock [110, 111] as well as Wildekamp [16] and Wildekamp et al. [23] did not accept any of these 16 taxa as valid. Wildekamp et al. [23] placed A. cypris alexandri, A. cypris boulengeri, A. cypris orontis, A. sophiae similis and A. sophiae mentoides in the synonymy of A. mento. These subspecies have species rank and are considered in the genus Paraphanius here.

The species diagnosis is valid also as a genus-level diagnosis.

Type species.

Aphanius mento (Heckel, 1843), Mossul, northern Iraq (36°18'N, 43°18'E). Possible syntypes: NMW 21699–704 (6), 59832 (21), illustrated by Heckel 1843: Pl. 6 (Fig 4).

Etymology.

The generic name, Paraphanius, is made out of the Greek word Para, meaning "near, resembling", and Aphanius, from the Greek word Aphanus, meaning "invisible", a genus of tooth-carp fish, in reference to its phylogenetic position being sister to Aphanius and Aphaniops.

Found in the Orontes (= Asi) and Tigris-Euphrates basins, the Levant in coastal and the Dead Sea basins, western Jordan, and in southern Turkey in Mediterranean basins as well as in central Turkey.

Paraphanius mento, the type species.

Scales along the body 23–28, a total of 9–14 rays in the dorsal fin, a total of 9–13 in the anal fin, 12–16 and 4–6 rays in pectoral and pelvic fins respectively. Total gill rakers 11–15. The jaw teeth display a long middle cusp and short lateral cusps, otoliths are triangular in shape, have a prominent rostrum, and a straight sulcus. A total of 25–26 vertebrae present in the vertebral column, five preural vertebrae (PU1–5) with long haemal and neural spines, the presence of a small plate in front of the spines of PU5, flank scales are squarish to a vertical oval in general shape. There is no pelvic axillary scale. The gut is s-shaped.

Included species.

Aphanius alexandri, A. mento, A. mentoides, A. orontis, A. similis, and Aphanius sp.

Discussion

Species delimitation

Traditional morphology-based approaches are unable to distinguish cryptic entities and unveil the loss of genetic diversity. Hence, they underestimate the true biological diversity, and protecting only the visible biodiversity adds additional level of uncertainty for monitoring and management actions of biodiversity and evolutionary processes [112115]. Therefore, recent taxonomic and phylogenetic studies are mostly based on morphological and molecular data [116125]. In this study, we considered the phylogenetic concept of the species and discussed also the previously published morphological characteristics of the species. It should be also noted that in this section, we refer to the name of three genera Aphanius, Aphaniops, and Paraphanius for referring their representative species. By applying a COI barcode library for the tooth-carps fishes of the Old World, we conducted an array of molecular species delimitation analyses (i.e., ABGD [100], SP [102], bPTP [104], and bGMYC [105]) to investigate species boundaries and to compared the results to existing morphology-based taxonomy. Across the entire tree, the number of species-level MOTUs (i.e. molecular operational taxonomic units) varied depending on the technique applied, ranging from 35 in SP to 48 in bPTP. The combination of these methods identified 28 (70%) among 40 nominal species. Several MOTUs did not correspond to nominal species, revealing potential cases of synonymy and the presence of species-level cryptic diversity within nominal species. Nevertheless, all the known tooth-carp species were monophyletic except Aphaniops dispar, Aphaniops stiassnyae, Aphanius pluristriatus, and Aphanius fontinalis. The majority of methods used split several nominal species including Aphaniops dispar, Aphaniops stoliczkanus, Aphanius fasciatus, and Aphanius anatoliae into the independent lineages, which might reflect deep divergences occurring between populations across these species distributions. The species delimitation methods used here revealed a low diversity of the COI barcode region in several species: (i) Aphanius fontinalis with Aphanius sureyanus; (ii) Aphaniops stiassnyae with Aphaniops dispar; and (iii) Aphanius pluristriatus, Aphanius kavirensis, Aphanius sp. from Yazd and Aphanius mesopotamicus within the Aphanius sophiae group. The complexity of the A. sophiae species group has already been discussed in detail [19]. According to Esmaeili et al. [19], the A. sophiae subclade includes the most diverse subclade of inland and inland-related species (IIRAS). These authors subdivided the A. sophiae subclade into three lineages according to their temporal diversification including i) the lineage of Aphanius isfahanensis containing only this species, which diverged much earlier (4.8. m.y.a. according to Hrbek et al. [40]) than all other species of the A. sophiae subclade, ii) Aphanius farsicus + Aphanius arakensis which probably diverged in the Late Pleistocene (100,000–11,700 y. ago), and iii) the lineage of A. mesopotamicus comprising a group of very closely related species (A. sophiae, A. mesopotamicus, A. pluristriatus, A. kavirensis) that may have diversified 11,700 to 4,000 y. ago (Early to Middle Holocene) (see also Gholami et al. [48]). Notably, external characters do not unambiguously distinguish between the species of the A. sophiae subclade, with the exception of A. isfahanensis. However, differences in cytochrome b sequences and also between the otoliths clearly show that the species of the A. sophiae subclade are distinct [4748]. In addition, they inhabit widely separated distribution areas without any hydrological networks or connectivity between, which promotes speciation (Fig 1). These are the reasons that we consider the species of the A. sophiae subclade as distinct species rather than as populations of a single species.

Moreover, Geiger et al. [86] and Behrens-Chapuis et al. [126] showed that the COI barcode region could not resolve a notable number of fish species. This situation is also usually found in other animal groups [3, 127129]. The disagreement between distances in the COI barcoding gene sequence and morphologically recognized species might be due to introgressive hybridization, fast evolution, recent speciation events (young group) and genetic drift [86, 126, 130].

Applying molecular species delimitation methods revealed high genetic diversity in Aphaniops ginaonis, a species restricted to Genow hot spring in the Hormuzgan basin, southern Iran. This spring is geographically very close to another endemic tooth-carp in this basin, Aphaniops hormuzensis. Variation in the population of A. ginaonis has already been noticed and discussed by considering otolith morphology [131]. In the study of Reichenbacher et al. [131], some otoliths showed an atypical morphology i.e., a reduced rostrum length and a lower or higher length/height value. The presence of these otoliths highlighted the possibility of hybridization between A. ginaonis and A. hormuzensis. Here, such variability is observed in the COI barcode region of studied A. ginaonis individuals. Since this spring is currently used by local people for hydrotherapy, possible hybridization cannot be ruled out in this hot spring.

Systematics and biogeography of the Aphaniops dispar group have already been discussed by Teimori et al. [15]. The most common species in the family Aphaniidae is A. dispar and it has long been regarded as a species group rather than a single species. Based on the data provided by Teimori et al. [15] and Freyhof et al. [10], nine species are recognized in the A. dispar group. The “true” A. dispar from the Red and the Mediterranean Sea basins, Aphaniops stoliczkanus from the coastal areas of the Persian Gulf, the northern Arabian Sea east to Gujarat in India, the Gulf of Oman and some endorheic basins in Iran and Pakistan, Aphaniops richardsoni from spring-stream systems in the Dead Sea basin, Aphaniops sirhani from the Azraq Oasis in Jordan, A. ginaonis from a single spring in Hormuzgan basin S-Iran, Aphaniops furcatus from a few streams and springs in Hormuzgan basin S- Iran, A. hormuzensis from Hormuzgan basin S- Iran, A. stiassnyae from one lake in Ethiopia and Aphaniops kruppi from the Wadi Al Batha drainage in northern Oman. Hence, based on the Teimori et al. [15], Freyhof et al. [10], and the data presented here, especially molecular species delimitation methods using the COI barcode region (Fig 2) for Aphaniops dispar, the hypothesis of the presence of a single widespread coastal species in the Middle East is rejected and makes it possible that more additional unidentified species occur in the Red Sea basin.

Since biodiversity is in decline due to climate change and anthropogenic land use [132, 133], species are vanishing at a distressing rate while a growing body of evidence underpins the considerable impact of biodiversity loss on the functioning of ecosystems [134136]. This is also true in the case of the studied fishes, which are the only members of the tooth-carps in the Old World [16], and most of their species are endemic to the landlocked water systems and are under threat owing to natural and human-induced disturbances [14]. These disturbances even forced some species, such as Aphanius farsicus, to the edge of extinction [137]. In this context, the efficiency of species identification in some aphaniids was demonstrated in the present study by DNA barcoding and emphasized that COI sequencing could be used to reconstruct the evolutionary relationships within the family Aphaniidae.

Taxonomic remarks on the genera Aphanius, Aphaniops, and Paraphanius

As suggested by Hrbek & Meyer [11], the genus Aphanius could be ecologically divided into two main groups: The first group contains those species inhabiting brackish water and euryhaline coastal environments such as the members of A. dispar group. The second group includes those species inhabiting freshwater systems such as spring-streams, creeks, marshes, and lakes in landlocked basins. Good examples for the latter are those species inhabiting the inland water systems in Anatolia and Iran. The molecular-based study of Hrbek & Meyer [11], highlighted two major phylogenetic clades for the Palearctic killifishes that correspond to the former eastern and western Tethys Sea. Within the eastern clade, two distinct groups have been recognized. One was the freshwater group inhabiting the Arabian Peninsula and the second one was an euryhaline group inhabiting the coastal regions from Pakistan to Somalia. Within the western clade, they recognized a group containing the killifishes of the Iberian Peninsula and the Atlas Mountains, and Turkey and Iran. Based on the tree topology presented here, the Paraphanius mento group (P. alexandri, P. mento, P. mentoides, P. orontis, P. similis, and Paraphanius sp.) make a distinct clade sister to Aphaniops dispar plus the inland and inland-related tooth-carps/A. fasciatus groups. Parenti [28], has been summarized several diagnostic features for Aphanius mento (now Paraphanius mento) that are not found in the members of Aphanius and Aphaniops, including a cartilaginous interhyal (ossified in Aphanius and Aphaniops), an embedded urohyal (not embedded in Aphanius and Aphaniops, see also Teimori et al. [59]), an upturned lower jaw (not upturned in other Aphanius and Aphaniops), and a distinctive neuromast pattern on the dorsal surface of the head (less prominently developed in Aphanius and Aphaniops species). Therefore, she proposed A. mento as a derived member of the Aphanius-like clade that should be designated as “Aphanius”. This taxonomic separation has later been supported by the observation of the sulcus morphology of the otoliths (Reichenbacher et al. [29], see below).

A study by Reichenbacher et al. [29] used the shape of the otolith sulcus and provided a parameter for the preliminary assignment of the Old World cyprinodontiforms to distinct groups. Based on their study, the Old World tooth-carps can be assigned into two groups: Group I consists of the otoliths with straight sulcus (Fig 4 in Reichenbacher et al. [29]) and includes the Mediterranean species Aphanius baeticus, A. iberus, A. fasciatus, A. mento (now Paraphanius mento), and the Turkish species; Group II consists of the otoliths with a sulcus distinctly bent terminally (Fig 7 in Reichenbacher et al. [29]). The latter group includes the tooth-carps from the Arabian Peninsula, A. ginaonis (now Aphaniops ginaonis), and A. sirhani (now Aphaniops sirhani).

Hrbek & Meyer [11] sorted one species from Group I, i.e., Aphanius mento (now Paraphanius mento), into the brackish water group consisting of A. dispar, A. ginaonis, and A. sirhani, which represent the Group II in the study of Reichenbacher et al. [29] (see above). As a result, Reichenbacher et al. [29] considered A. mento to be an intermediate form between the two groups or clades. In the present study, the phylogenetic analyses revealed that a clade containing Paraphanius mento (plus P. orontis, P. mentoides, P. alexandri, A. similis, Paraphanius sp.), has a basal position in the phylogenetic tree of the Old World tooth-carps, and it is sister to the brackish water A. dispar group plus the clade containing inland and inland-related tooth-carps/A. fasciatus group. This phylogenetic separation is not completely consistent with the molecular phylogeny provided by Hrbek & Meyer [11], and also partly with the outcomes of Reichenbacher et al. [29].

In addition to the P. mento clade, in our DNA barcoding analysis on the Old World tooth-carps, two other large groups were recognized. The first one was the A. dispar-like brackish water tooth-carps containing also A. furcatus (a brackish water scaleless tooth-carp) and A. sirhani. The second group contains all the inland and inland related tooth-carps plus A. fasciatus and A. apodus. It should be noted that all the inland tooth-carps from Anatolia, Turkey, and Iran fall in the second group, and each of them formed a monophyletic group. This pattern of divergence has proved the hypothesis that all of the Old World tooth-carps originated from an ancestor populated the coastal environments.

Here, we listed several osteological features that show differences between these two large groups (i.e., the members of genus Aphaniops vs. those members of the genus Aphanius). (i) The number of total vertebrae in Aphaniops varies from 25 to 28, verses 26 to 29 in Aphanius, (ii) the vertebral columns in Aphaniops are often straight versus often slightly curved in Aphanius, (iii) the total number of principle caudal-fin rays (PCFR) varies from 9 to 12 (often 10) in Aphaniops versus 10–12 (often 11) in Aphanius, (iv) the proximal limit of the parhypural in Aphaniops is placed very close or has a moderate distance to preural centrum 1, while it has often a clear distance to preural centrum 1 in Aphanius, (v) the presence of a constriction on the proximal portion of the neural spine of the preural centrum 2–4 in Aphaniops, whereas no obvious constriction presents on the proximal portion of the hemal spine of the preural centrum in Aphanius, (vi) the neural and hemal spines of preural centrum 4 supports at least some caudal fin rays in Aphaniops, while they do not reach and support the caudal fin rays in Aphanius.

The taxonomic status based on morphology shows the presence of three distinct genera in the family Aphaniidae is confirmed with genetic distances. The average genetic distance among the populations and subspecies is 0.0137% and 0.171%, respectively [138]. Among the genera, this value ranges from 7.70% to 30.50% (mean 23.70%), and within the family, it ranges from 17% to 31% (mean 25%) [138]. In this study, the average K2P genetic distance between a group containing P. mento versus a group containing brackish water taxa was 17%, while the average K2P genetic distance between a group containing P. mento versus a group containing the inland and inland-related taxa was 19.6% (Table 3). The mean genetic K2P distance within the brackish water group, within the inland and inland-related group, and within the P. mento group were 3.7% (S.E. = 0.4%), 13.1% (S.E. = 1%) and 4.8% (S.E. = 0.5%), respectively (Table 4).

Based on the literature review given in the manuscript, morphological comparisons among the distinct groups of the Old World tooth-carps, and species delimitation approached examined in this study, we recognized the genera Aphanius Nardo, 1827 and Aphaniops Hoedeman, 1951 as valid. The type species for the genus Aphanius Nardo, 1827 is Aphanius nanus Nardo, 1827 (= A. fasciatus) by subsequent designation of Jordan [25]. The type species for the genus Aphaniops is Lebias dispar Rüppel, 1829 [111].

The genus Aphanius contains all the inland and inland-related tooth-carps, which are mainly distributed in the inland waters in Turkey and Iran and also in the inland-related environments around the Mediterranean basin (Fig 2). The genus Aphaniops contains all the brackish water in the coastal lines around the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf basins (Fig 2).

Parenti [28] used the Aphanius mento-complex to include mento (Heckel) and chantrei (Gaillard, 1895). Also, Parenti [28] placed the genus name Aphanius in parentheses because she noted several deviations from “normal” Aphanius species concerning the following characteristics: urohyal embedded in the fold of the branchiostegal membranes and a derived head region pore pattern. As mentioned above, some otolith features have also been reported by Reichenbacher et al. [29] to be unique in A. mento and not find in other species of the genus Aphanius. Thus, they proposed A. mento to be an intermediate form between the two Aphanius groups (Aphanius and Aphaniops in this study).

Parenti [28, 139] places this species in the genus "Aphanius", i.e. distinct from true Aphanius without defining and naming a new genus. This genus is more closely related to the Anatolian Kosswigichthys Sözer, 1942 and the South American Orestias Valenciennes in Cuvier and Valenciennes, 1846 than true Aphanius.

Comparative material.

See S1 Appendix for the list of comparative material examined. The list includes those materials examined by Esmaeili et al. ([50]: farsicus), Esmaeili et al. ([19]: A. darabensis and A. kavirensis); Teimori et al. ([47]: A. arakensis), Gholami et al. ([48]: A. shirini); Gholami et al. ([20, 80]: A. farsicus and A. sophiae), Teimori et al. ([51]: A. furcatus) and Teimori et al. ([15]: A. dispar group).

Nomenclatural acts.

The electronic edition of this article conforms to the requirements of the amended International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, and hence the new names contained herein are available under that Code from the electronic edition of this article. This published work and the nomenclatural acts it contains have been registered in ZooBank, the online registration system for the ICZN. The ZooBank LSIDs (Life Science Identifiers) can be resolved and the associated information viewed through any standard web browser by appending the LSID to the prefix “http://zoobank.org/”. The LSID for this publication is: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A8F5EA21-50CE-4FBE-969C-EA6B61FFBABE

Supporting information

S1 Appendix. List of comparative material examined.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231717.s001

(DOCX)

S1 Table. Mean K2P distances between the studied tooth-carps within the family Aphaniidae.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231717.s002

(XLS)

Acknowledgments

We are pleased to thank U. Schliewen and D. Neumann, Department of Ichthyology, Bavarian Natural History Collections, SNSB Bavarian State Collection of Zoology (ZSM) for providing X-ray photography facilities. We thank Z. Gholami helping with DNA extraction. We thank R. Zamanian Nejad, S. Babaee, R. Khaefi, M. Masoudi, and H.R. Mehraban helping with fish collection. We thank B.W. Coad for editing the ms. The research work was approved by the Ethics Committee of Biology Department (SU-9233856).

References

  1. 1. Wheeler QD. Taxonomic triage and the poverty of phylogeny. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series B: Biological Sciences. 2004;359(1444):571–583. pmid:15253345
  2. 2. de Queiroz K. Species concepts and species delimitation. Systematic Biology. 2007;56(6):879–886. pmid:18027281
  3. 3. Hebert PDN, Cywinska A, Ball SL, Dewaard JR. Biological identifications through DNA barcodes. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B: Biological Sciences. 2003;270(1512):313–321. pmid:12614582
  4. 4. Ward RD, Zemlak TS, Innes BH, Last PR, Hebert PDN. DNA barcoding Australia's fish species. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 2005;360(1462):1847–1857. pmid:16214743
  5. 5. Ivanova NV, Zemlak TS, Hanner RH, Hebert PDN. Universal primer cocktails for fish DNA barcoding. Molecular Ecology Notes. 2007;7(4):544–548. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-8286.2007.01748.x
  6. 6. Ratnasingham S, Hebert PD. BOLD: The barcode of life data system (www.barcodinglife.org). Molecular Ecology Notes. 2007;7:355–364. pmid:18784790
  7. 7. Landi M, Dimech M, Arculeo M, Biondo G, Martins R, Carneiro M, et al. DNA barcoding for species assignment: the case of Mediterranean marine fishes. PLoS one. 2014;9(9):e106135. pmid:25222272
  8. 8. Gaudant J, Sendrós JR. Découverte de la plus ancienne espèce connue du genre Aphanius Nardo (Poissons téléosténns), dans le Miocène inférieur évaporitique de la Catalogne. Batalleria. 1998;1998(8):55–60.
  9. 9. Freyhof J, Özuluğ M, Saç G. Neotype designation of Aphanius iconii, first reviser action to stabilise the usage of A. fontinalis and A. meridionalis and comments on the family group names of fishes placed in Cyprinodontidae (Teleostei: Cyprinodontiformes). Zootaxa. 2017;4294(5):573–585. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4294.5.6
  10. 10. Freyhof J, Weissenbacher A, Geiger M. Aphanius kruppi, a new killifish from Oman with comments on the A. dispar species group (Cyprinodontiformes: Aphaniidae). Zootaxa. 2017;4338(3):557–573. pmid:29245719
  11. 11. Hrbek T, Meyer A. Closing of the Tethys Sea and the phylogeny of Eurasian killifishes (Cyprinodontiformes: Cyprinodontidae). Journal of Evolutionary Biology. 2003;16(1):17–36. pmid:14635877
  12. 12. Kosswig C. Zoogeography of the near East. Systematic Biology. 1955;4(2):49–73. https://doi.org/10.2307/sysbio/4.2.49
  13. 13. Sethi RP. Osteology and phylogeny of oviparous cyprinodont fishes (order Cyprinodontiformes). PhD Thesis, University of Florida. 1960.
  14. 14. Esmaeili HR, Coad BW, Gholamifard A, Nazari N, Teimory A. Annotated сhecklist of the freshwater fishes of Iran. Zoosystematica Rossica. 2010;19(2):361–386.
  15. 15. Teimori A, Esmaeili HR, Hamidan N, Reichenbacher B. Systematics and historical biogeography of the Aphanius dispar species group (Teleostei: Aphaniidae) and description of a new species from Southern Iran. Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. 2018;56(4):579–598. https://doi.org/10.1111/jzs.12228
  16. 16. Wildekamp RH. A world of killies: atlas of the oviparous cyprinodontiform fishes of the World, Vol. I. Indiana: American Killifish Association; 1993.
  17. 17. Villwock W. Das genus Aphanius Nardo, 1827. Deutsche Killifische Gemeinschaft Journal. 1977;9(11):165–185.
  18. 18. Coad BW. Distribution of Aphanius species in Iran. The Journal of the American Killifish Association. 2000;33:183–191.
  19. 19. Esmaeili HR, Teimori A, Gholami Z, Reichenbacher B. Two new species of the tooth-carp Aphanius (Teleostei: Cyprinodontidae) and the evolutionary history of the Iranian inland and inland-related Aphanius species. Zootaxa. 2014;3786(3):246–268. pmid:24869537
  20. 20. Gholami Z, Esmaeili HR, Erpenbeck D, Reichenbacher B. Genetic connectivity and phenotypic plasticity in the cyprinodont Aphanius farsicus from the Maharlu Basin, south-western Iran. Journal of Fish Biology. 2015;86(3):882–906. pmid:25644025
  21. 21. Teimori A, Jawad LAJ, Al-Kharusi LH, Al-Mamry JM, Reichenbacher B. Late Pleistocene to Holocene diversification and historical zoogeography of the Arabian killifish (Aphanius dispar) inferred from otolith morphology. Scientia Marina. 2012;76(4):637–645. https://doi.org/10.3989/scimar.03635.26C
  22. 22. Teimori A, Schulz-Mirbach T, Esmaeili HR, Reichenbacher B. Geographical differentiation of Aphanius dispar (Teleostei: Cyprinodontidae) from southern Iran. Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. 2012;50(4):289–304. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0469.2012.00667.x
  23. 23. Wİldekamp RH, Küçük F, Ünlüsayin M, Van Neer W. Species and subspecies of the genus Aphanius Nardo 1897 (Pisces: Cyprinodontidae) in Turkey. Turkish Journal of Zoology. 1999;23(1):23–44.
  24. 24. Kottelat M, Wheeler AC. Aphanius Nardo, 1827 (Osteichthyes, Cyprinodontiformes): proposed placement on the Official List. Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature. 2001;58:110–115.
  25. 25. Jordan DS. The genera of fishes: from linnaeus to Cuvier, 1758–1833, seventy-five years, with the accepted type of each, a contribution to the stability of scientific nomenclature. Stanford University: Leland Stanford Jr. University Publications; 1917.
  26. 26. Lazara KJ. History of the genera Lebia Oken 1817 and Lebias Goldfuss 1820 (Teleostei: Cyprinodontiformes: Cyprinodontidae) with designation of a type species for Lebias. Copeia. 1995;1995(2):501–503. https://doi.org/10.2307/1446923
  27. 27. Parenti LR. A phylogenetic and biogeographic analysis of cyprinodontiform fishes (Teleostei, Atherinomorpha). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 1981;168:335–557.
  28. 28. Reichenbacher B, Sienknecht U, Küchenhoff H, Fenske N. Combined otolith morphology and morphometry for assessing taxonomy and diversity in fossil and extant killifish (Aphanius,†Prolebias). Journal of Morphology. 2007;268(10):898–915. pmid:17674357
  29. 29. Lazara KJ. The killifishes, an annotated checklist, synonymy, and bibliography of recent oviparous Cyprinodontiform fishes. The killifish master index. Indiana: American Killifish Association; 2001.
  30. 30. Hoedeman JJ. Rediagnosis of the old world cyprinodont genus Aphanius. Beaufortia. 1951;1(1):1–6.
  31. 31. Tortonese E. [Various family accounts.]. In: Hureau J-C, Monod T, editors. Check-list of the fishes of the north-eastern Atlantic and of the Mediterranean. Paris: UNESCO; 1973.
  32. 32. Wildekamp RH, Romand R, Scheel JJ. Cyprinodontidae. Check-list of the freshwater fishes of Africa (CLOFFA). 2. Paris: ORSTOM; 1986. pp. 165–276.
  33. 33. Coad BW. Aphanius vladykovi, a new species of tooth-carp from the Zagros Mountains of Iran (Osteichthyes: Cyprinodontidae). Environmental Biology of Fishes. 1988;23(1):115–126. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00000741
  34. 34. Krupp F, Schneider W. The fishes of the Jordan River drainage basin and Azraq Oasis. Fauna of Saudi Arabia. 1989;10:347–416.
  35. 35. Poll M, Gosse J-P. Genera des poissons d'eau douce de l'Afrique. Mémoire de la Classe des Sciences. 1995;9:1–324.
  36. 36. Seegers L. Aqualog: killifishes of the World: Old World killis II. Germany: Aqualog, Verlag A.C.S., Mörfelden-Walldorf; 1997.
  37. 37. Doadrio I, Carmona JA, Fernandez-Delgado C. Morphometric study of the Iberian Aphanius (Actinopterygii, Cyprinodontiformes), with description of a new species. Folia Zoologica. 2002;51(1):67–80.
  38. 38. Huber JH. A review of family-group names for oviparous Cyprinodontiformes (Pisces: Teleostei). UK: British Killifish Association, Separatum; 2005.
  39. 39. Jl Blanco, Hrbek T, Doadrio I. A new species of the genus Aphanius (Nardo, 1832)(Actinopterygii, Cyprinodontidae) from Algeria. Zootaxa. 2006;1158(1):39–53. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1158.1.2
  40. 40. Hrbek T, Keivany Y, Coad BW. New species of Aphanius (Teleostei, Cyprinodontidae) from Isfahan Province of Iran and a reanalysis of other Iranian species. Copeia. 2006;2006(2):244–255. https://doi.org/10.1643/0045-8511(2006)6[244:NSOATC]2.0.CO;2
  41. 41. Kottelat M, Barbieri R, Stoumboudi MT. Aphanius almitiensis, a new species of toothcarp from Greece (Teleostei: Cyprinodontidae). Revue Suisse de Zoologie. 2007;114(1):13–31. https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.part.80385
  42. 42. Kottelat M, Freyhof Jr. Handbook of European freshwater fishes. Cornol, Switzerland: Publications Kottelat; 2007.
  43. 43. Hertwig ST. Phylogeny of the Cyprinodontiformes (Teleostei, Atherinomorpha): the contribution of cranial soft tissue characters. Zoologica Scripta. 2008;37(2):141–174. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1463-6409.2007.00314.x
  44. 44. Coad B. A new species of tooth-carp, Aphanius mesopotamicus, from Iran and Iraq (Actinopterygii, Cyprinodontidae). Zookeys. 2009;31:149. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.31.131
  45. 45. Teimori A, Esmaeili HR, Reichenbacher B. Aphanius farsicus, a replacement name for A. persicus (Jenkins, 1910)(Teleostei, Cyprinodontidae). Zootaxa. 2011;3096(1):53–58. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3096.1.5
  46. 46. Esmaeili HR, Teimori A, Gholami Z, Zarei N, Reichenbacher B. Re-validation and re-description of an endemic and threatened species, Aphanius pluristriatus (Jenkins, 1910)(Teleostei, Cyprinodontidae), from southern Iran. Zootaxa. 2012;3208(1):58–67. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3208.1.4
  47. 47. Teimori A, Esmaeili HR, Gholami Z, Zarei N, Reichenbacher B. Aphanius arakensis, a new species of tooth-carp (Actinopterygii, Cyprinodontidae) from the endorheic Namak Lake basin in Iran. Zookeys. 2012;215:55–76. pmid:22936871
  48. 48. Gholami Z, Esmaeili HR, Erpenbeck D, Reichenbacher B. Phylogenetic analysis of Aphanius from the endorheic Kor River Basin in the Zagros Mountains, South‐western Iran (Teleostei: Cyprinodontiformes: Cyprinodontidae). Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. 2014;52(2):130–141. https://doi.org/10.1111/jzs.12052
  49. 49. Keivany Y, Esmaeili HR. Threatened fishes of the world: Aphanius pluristriatus (Jenkins 1910)(Cyprinodontidae). Aqua: International Journal of Ichthyology. 2014;20(2):67–73.
  50. 50. Esmaeili HR, Teimori A, Sayyadzadeh G, Masoudi M, Reichenbacher B. Phylogenetic relationships of the tooth-carp Aphanius (Teleostei: Cyprinodontidae) in the river systems of southern and south-western Iran based on mtDNA sequences. Zoology in the Middle East. 2014;60(1):29–38. https://doi.org/10.1080/09397140.2014.892329
  51. 51. Teimori A, Esmaeili HR, Erpenbeck D, Reichenbacher B. A new and unique species of the genus Aphanius Nardo, 1827 (Teleostei: Cyprinodontidae) from Southern Iran: A case of regressive evolution. Zoologischer Anzeiger-A Journal of Comparative Zoology. 2014;253(4):327–337. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcz.2013.12.001
  52. 52. Pfleiderer SJ, Geiger MF, Herder F. Aphanius marassantensis, a new toothcarp from the Kızılırmak drainage in northern Anatolia (Cyprinodontiformes: Cyprinodontidae). Zootaxa. 2014;3887(5):569–582. pmid:25543950
  53. 53. Huber JH. Comments on the description of Aphanius marassantensis by Pfleiderer, Geiger & Herder, 2014, with proposed synonymization. Killi-Data. 2015;2015:31–35.
  54. 54. Jouladeh-Roudbar A, Vatandoust S, Eagderi S, Jafari-Kenari S, Mousavi-Sabet H. Freshwater fishes of Iran; an updated checklist. AACL Bioflux. 2015;8(6):855–909.
  55. 55. Esmaeili HR, Mehraban H, Abbasi K, Keivany Y, Brian WC. Review and updated checklist of freshwater fishes of Iran: Taxonomy, distribution and conservation status. Iranian Journal of Ichthyology. 2017;4(Suppl. 1):1–114.
  56. 56. Çiçek E, Fricke R, Sungur S, Eagderi S. Endemic freshwater fishes of Turkey. FishTaxa. 2018;3(4):1–39.
  57. 57. Esmaeili HR, Sayyadzadeh G, Eagderi S, Abbasi K. Checklist of freshwater fishes of Iran. FishTaxa. 2018;3(3):1–95.
  58. 58. Golani D, Fricke R. Checklist of the Red Sea fishes with delineation of the Gulf of Suez, Gulf of Aqaba, endemism and Lessepsian migrants. Zootaxa. 2018;4509(1):1–215. pmid:30485948
  59. 59. Teimori A, Motamedi M, Iranmanesh A. Comparative morphology of urohyal bone in brackish water species of the genus Aphanius Nardo, 1827 in the Persian Gulf and Southeastern Mediterranean Sea basins (Teleostei: Aphaniidae). Mediterranean Marine Science. 2018;19(2):356–365. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/mms.15929
  60. 60. Yoğurtçuoğlu B, Freyhof J. Aphanius irregularis, a new killifish from south-western Anatolia (Cyprinodontiformes: Aphaniidae). Zootaxa. 2018;4410(2):319–330. pmid:29690146
  61. 61. Teimori A, Motamedi M. The first complete mitochondrial genome sequence in the genus Aphanius (Teleostei). Journal of Ichthyology. 2019;59(5):754–765. https://doi.org/10.1134/S0032945219050151
  62. 62. Motamedi M, Teimori A, Iranmanesh A. Ontogenetic pattern, morphological sexual and side dimorphism in the saccular otolith of a scaleless killifish Aphanius furcatus (Teleostei: Aphaniidae). Acta Zoologica. 2019;00:1–13. https://doi.org/10.1111/azo.12313
  63. 63. Costa WJEM. Phylogeny and classification of the Cyprinodontidae revisited (Teleostei: Cyprinodontiformes): are Andean and Anatolian killifishes sister taxa. Journal of Comparative Biology. 1997;2(1):1–17.
  64. 64. Nelson JS, Grande TC, Wilson MVH. Fishes of the World. New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.; 2016.
  65. 65. Fricke R, Eschmeyer WN, van der Laan R. Eschmeyer's catalog of fishes: genera, species, references. http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/ichthyology/catalog/fishcatmain.asp. Electronic version accessed 20 August 2019. 2019.
  66. 66. Coad BW, Abdoli A. Systematics of an isolated population of tooth-carp from northern Iran (Actinopterygii: Cyprinodontidae). Zoology in the Middle East. 2000;21(1):87–102. https://doi.org/10.1080/09397140.2000.10637836
  67. 67. Chiozzi G, Stiassny MLJ, Alter SE, De Marchi G, Mebrahtu Y, Tessema M, et al. Fishes in the desert: mitochondrial variation and phylogeography of Danakilia (Actinopterygii: Cichlidae) and Aphanius (Actinopterygii: Cyprinodontidae) in the Danakil Depression of northeastern Africa. Mitochondrial DNA Part A. 2018;29(7):1025–1040. pmid:29166850
  68. 68. Ferrito V, Mannino MC, Pappalardo AM, Tigano C. Morphological variation among populations of Aphanius fasciatus Nardo, 1827 (Teleostei, Cyprinodontidae) from the Mediterranean. Journal of Fish Biology. 2007;70(1):1–20. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8649.2006.01192.x
  69. 69. Ferrito V, Pappalardo AM, Canapa A, Barucca M, Doadrio I, Olmo E, et al. Mitochondrial phylogeography of the killifish Aphanius fasciatus (Teleostei, Cyprinodontidae) reveals highly divergent Mediterranean populations. Marine Biology. 2013;160(12):3193–3208. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00227-013-2307-4
  70. 70. Tigano C, Ferrito V, Nicosia R. Morphological analysis of the pharyngeal jaws in two populations of Lebias fasciata Valenciennes, 1821 (Teleostei: Cyprinodontidae). Journal of Morphology. 1999;241(2):107–114. pmid:10420157
  71. 71. Tigano C, Canapa A, Ferrito V, Barucca M, Arcidiacono I, Deidun A, et al. A study of osteological and molecular differences in populations of Aphanius fasciatus Nardo 1827, from the central Mediterranean (Teleostei, Cyprinodontidae). Marine Biology. 2006;149(6):1539–1550. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-006-0300-x
  72. 72. Villwock W. Aphanius (Nardo, 1827) and Cyprinodon (Lac, 1803)(Pisces: Cyprinodontidae), an attempt for a genetic interpretation of speciation. Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. 1983;20(3):187–197. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0469.1983.tb00264.x
  73. 73. Esmaeili HR, Zarei F, Vahed NS, Masoudi M. Scale morphology and phylogenetic character mapping of scale-surface microstructures in sixteen Aphanius species (Teleostei: Aphaniidae). Micron. 2019;119:39–53. pmid:30660090
  74. 74. Sanjarani Vahed N, Esmaeili HR, Masoudi M, Reichenbacher B. Early otolith development in the critically endangered tooth-carp, Aphanius farsicus (Teleostei: Cyprinodontidae). Environmental Biology of Fishes. 2018;101(9):1309–1317. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-018-0778-3
  75. 75. Masoudi M, Esmaeili HR, Ebrahimi M. Embryology and early ontogeny of an endemic tooth‐carp fish, Aphanius sophiae (Heckel, 1847). Journal of Applied Ichthyology. 2018;34(3):622–632. https://doi.org/10.1111/jai.13630
  76. 76. Sanjarani Vahed N, Esmaeili HR, Masoudi M, Ebrahimi M. Embryonic and early development of the Zagros tooth‐carp, Aphanius vladykovi (Actinopterygii: Cyprinodontidae). Journal of Morphology. 2018;279(6):747–756. pmid:29464805
  77. 77. Sanjarani Vahed N, Esmaeili HR, Masoudi M, Ebrahimi M. Towards the conservation of a critically endangered species, Aphanius farsicus: embryogenesis and development. Environmental Biology of Fishes. 2018;101(1):193–202. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-017-0691-1
  78. 78. Sanjarani Vahed N, Esmaeili HR, Masoudi M, Reichenbacher B. Ontogenetic otolith development in an endemic tooth-carp, Aphanius vladykovi (Teleostei: Aphaniidae). Journal of Ichthyology. 2019;59(3):336–343. https://doi.org/10.1134/S0032945219030172
  79. 79. Masoudi M, Esmaeili HR, Ebrahimi M, Teimori A, Seifali M. Reproductive biology of two sympatric species of tooth-carps: Aphanius hormuzensis and Aphanius furcatus, from south of Iran (Teleostei: Aphaniidae). International Journal of Aquatic Biology. 2018;6(4):189–197.
  80. 80. Gholami Z, Esmaeili HR, Reichenbacher B. New data on the zoogeography of Aphanius sophiae (Teleostei: Cyprinodontidae) in the Central Zagros (Southwest Iran). Limnologica. 2015;51:70–82. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.limno.2014.12.002
  81. 81. Gholami Z, Teimori A, Esmaeili HR, Schulz-Mirbach T, Reichenbacher B. Scale surface microstructure and scale size in the tooth-carp genus Aphanius (Teleostei, Cyprinodontidae) from endorheic basins in Southwest Iran. Zootaxa. 2013;3619(4):467–490. pmid:26131487
  82. 82. Masoudi M, Esmaeili HR, Teimori A, Gholami Z, Gholamhosseini A, Sayyadzadeh G, et al. Sympatry and possible hybridization among species of the killifish genus Aphanius Nardo, 1827 (Teleostei: Cyprinodontidae) in Southwestern Iran. Limnologica. 2016;59:10–20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.limno.2016.02.008
  83. 83. Coad BW. A re-description of Aphanius ginaonis (Holly, 1929) from southern Iran (Osteichthyes: Cyprinodontiformes). Journal of Natural History. 1980;14(1):33–40. https://doi.org/10.1080/00222938000770031
  84. 84. Vargas S, Schuster A, Sacher K, Büttner G, Schätzle S, Läuchli B, et al. Barcoding sponges: an overview based on comprehensive sampling. PloS one. 2012;7(7):e39345. pmid:22802937
  85. 85. Geiger MF. FREDIE—Freshwater Diversity Identification for Europe. Unpublished data on GenBank. 2018.
  86. 86. Geiger MF, Herder F, Monaghan MT, Almada V, Barbieri R, Bariche M, et al. Spatial heterogeneity in the Mediterranean Biodiversity Hotspot affects barcoding accuracy of its freshwater fishes. Molecular Ecology Resources. 2014;14(6):1210–1221. pmid:24690331
  87. 87. Rabaoui L, Lin Y-J, Qurban MA, Shen K-N. Fishes of the Arabian Gulf. Unpublished data on GenBank. 2016.
  88. 88. Webb SA, Graves JA, Macias-Garcia C, Magurran AE, Foighil DO, Ritchie MG. Molecular phylogeny of the livebearing Goodeidae (Cyprinodontiformes). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 2004;30(3):527–544. pmid:15012937
  89. 89. Hall TA. BioEdit: a user-friendly biological sequence alignment editor and analysis program for Windows 95/98/NT. Nucleic Acids Symposium Series. 1999;41(41):95–98.
  90. 90. Kumar S, Stecher G, Tamura K. MEGA7: molecular evolutionary genetics analysis version 7.0 for bigger datasets. Molecular Biology and Evolution. 2016;33(7):1870–1874. pmid:27004904
  91. 91. Xia X. DAMBE7: New and improved tools for data analysis in molecular biology and evolution. Molecular Biology and Evolution. 2018;35:1550–1552. pmid:29669107
  92. 92. Ronquist F, Teslenko M, Van Der Mark P, Ayres DL, Darling A, Höhna S, et al. MrBayes 3.2: efficient Bayesian phylogenetic inference and model choice across a large model space. Systematic Biology. 2012;61(3):539–542. pmid:22357727
  93. 93. Drummond AJ, Ho SY, Phillips MJ, Rambaut A. Relaxed phylogenetics and dating with confidence. PLoS Biology. 2006;4(5):e88. pmid:16683862
  94. 94. Drummond AJ, Suchard MA, Xie D, Rambaut A. Bayesian phylogenetics with BEAUti and the BEAST 1.7. Molecular Biology and Evolution. 2012;29(8):1969–1973. pmid:22367748
  95. 95. Rambaut A, Suchard MA, Xie D, Drummond AJ. Tracer v1.6. Available at: http://beast.bio.ed.ac.uk/Tracer. 2014.
  96. 96. Gaudant J. Révision de Prolebias stenoura Sauvage, 1874 du Stampien (= Rupélien) de Limagne (centre de la France), espèce type du genre Prolebias (poisson téléostéen, Cyprinodontiformes). Geodiversitas. 2012;34(2):409–423. https://doi.org/10.5252/g2012n2a9
  97. 97. Rambaut A, Drummond AJ. TreeAnnotator v1. 7.0. Available at: http://beast.bio.ed.ac.uk/TreeAnnotator. 2013.
  98. 98. Stamatakis A. RAxML-VI-HPC: maximum likelihood-based phylogenetic analyses with thousands of taxa and mixed models. Bioinformatics. 2006;22:2688–2690. pmid:16928733
  99. 99. Puillandre N, Lambert A, Brouillet S, Achaz G. ABGD, Automatic Barcode Gap Discovery for primary species delimitation. Molecular Ecology. 2012;21(8):1864–1877. pmid:21883587
  100. 100. Kimura M. A simple method for estimating evolutionary rates of base substitutions through comparative studies of nucleotide sequences. Journal of Molecular Evolution. 1980;16(2):111–120. pmid:7463489
  101. 101. Hart MW, Sunday J. Things fall apart: biological species form unconnected parsimony networks. Biology Letters. 2007;3(5):509–512. pmid:17650475
  102. 102. Clement M, Posada D, Crandall KA. TCS: a computer program to estimate gene genealogies. Molecular Ecology. 2000;9(10):1657–1659. pmid:11050560
  103. 103. Zhang J, Kapli P, Pavlidis P, Stamatakis A. A general species delimitation method with applications to phylogenetic placements. Bioinformatics. 2013;29(22):2869–2876. pmid:23990417
  104. 104. Reid NM, Carstens BC. Phylogenetic estimation error can decrease the accuracy of species delimitation: a Bayesian implementation of the general mixed Yule-coalescent model. BMC Evolutionary Biology. 2012;12(1):196. pmid:23031350
  105. 105. Yule G. A mathematical theory of evolution, based on the conclusions of Dr. JC Willis, FRS. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series B. 1925;213:21–87.
  106. 106. Kingman JFC. On the genealogy of large populations. Journal of Applied Probability. 1982;19(A):27–43. https://doi.org/10.2307/3213548
  107. 107. Team RC. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. http://R-Forge.R-project.org. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. 2013.
  108. 108. Akşiray F. Türkiye Cyprinodontidleri hakkında I. Türkische Cyprinodontiden I. Revue de la Faculté des Sciences de I’Université d’Istanbul. 1948;13:97–142.
  109. 109. Villwock VW. Genetische Untersuchungen an altweltlichen Zahnkarpfen der Tribus Aphaniini (Pisces, Cyprinodontidae) nach Gesichtspunkten der Neuen Systematik. Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. 1964;2(4):267–382. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0469.1964.tb00722.x
  110. 110. Villwock W. Weitere genetische Untersuchungen zur Frage der Verwandtschaftsbeziehungen anatolischer Zahnkarpfen. Mitteilungen aus dem Hamburgischen Zoologischen Museum und Institut. 1958;56:81–153.
  111. 111. Briggs JC. Coral reefs: conserving the evolutionary sources. Biological Conservation. 2005;126(3):297–305. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2005.06.018
  112. 112. Moritz C. Strategies to protect biological diversity and the evolutionary processes that sustain it. Systematic Biology. 2002;51(2):238–254. pmid:12028731
  113. 113. Moritz C. Conservation units and translocations: strategies for conserving evolutionary processes. Hereditas. 1999;130(3):217–228. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1601-5223.1999.00217.x
  114. 114. Adams M, Raadik TA, Burridge CP, Georges A. Global biodiversity assessment and hyper-cryptic species complexes: more than one species of elephant in the room?. Systematic Biology. 2014;63(4):518–533. pmid:24627185
  115. 115. Bálint M, Domisch S, Engelhardt CHM, Haase P, Lehrian S, Sauer J, et al. Cryptic biodiversity loss linked to global climate change. Nature Climate Change. 2011;1(6):313–318. https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate1191
  116. 116. Dincă V, Montagud S, Talavera G, Hernández-Roldán J, Munguira ML, García-Barros E, et al. DNA barcode reference library for Iberian butterflies enables a continental-scale preview of potential cryptic diversity. Scientific Reports. 2015;5:12395. pmid:26205828
  117. 117. Féral J-P. How useful are the genetic markers in attempts to understand and manage marine biodiversity?. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. 2002;268(2):121–145. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0022-0981(01)00382-3
  118. 118. Geist J. Integrative freshwater ecology and biodiversity conservation. Ecological Indicators. 2011;11(6):1507–1516. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2011.04.002
  119. 119. Karp A, Ingram DS, Isaac PG. Molecular tools for screening biodiversity: plants and animals. Springer Science & Business Media; 2012.
  120. 120. Mutanen M, Kaila L, Tabell J. Wide-ranging barcoding aids discovery of one-third increase of species richness in presumably well-investigated moths. Scientific Reports. 2013;3:2901. pmid:24104541
  121. 121. Pauls SU, Nowak C, Bálint M, Pfenninger M. The impact of global climate change on genetic diversity within populations and species. Molecular Ecology. 2013;22(4):925–946. pmid:23279006
  122. 122. Vieites DR, Wollenberg KC, Andreone F, Köhler J, Glaw F, Vences M. Vast underestimation of Madagascar's biodiversity evidenced by an integrative amphibian inventory. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2009;106(20):8267–8272. pmid:19416818
  123. 123. Yannic G, Pellissier L, Ortego J, Lecomte N, Couturier S, Cuyler C, et al. Genetic diversity in caribou linked to past and future climate change. Nature Climate Change. 2014;4(2):132. https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2074
  124. 124. Katouzian A-R, Sari A, Macher JN, Weiss M, Saboori A, Leese F, et al. Drastic underestimation of amphipod biodiversity in the endangered Irano-Anatolian and Caucasus biodiversity hotspots. Scientific Reports. 2016;6:22507. pmid:26928527
  125. 125. Behrens-Chapuis S, Herder F, Esmaeili HR, Freyhof J, Hamidan NA, Özuluğ M, et al. Adding nuclear rhodopsin data where mitochondrial COI indicates discrepancies–can this marker help to explain conflicts in cyprinids?. DNA Barcodes. 2015;3(1):187–199. https://doi.org/10.1515/dna-2015-0020
  126. 126. Vences M, Thomas M, Bonett RM, Vieites DR. Deciphering amphibian diversity through DNA barcoding: chances and challenges. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 2005;360(1462):1859–1868. pmid:16221604
  127. 127. Waugh J. DNA barcoding in animal species: progress, potential and pitfalls. BioEssays. 2007;29(2):188–197. pmid:17226815
  128. 128. Laurito M, de Oliveira TMP, Almiron WR, Sallum MAM. COI barcode versus morphological identification of Culex (Culex)(Diptera: Culicidae) species: a case study using samples from Argentina and Brazil. Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. 2013;108:110–122. pmid:24473810
  129. 129. Huemer P, Hebert PDN, Mutanen M, Wieser C, Wiesmair B, Hausmann A, et al. Large geographic distance versus small DNA barcode divergence: Insights from a comparison of European to South Siberian Lepidoptera. PloS one. 2018;13(11):e0206668. pmid:30388147
  130. 130. Thomas CD, Cameron A, Green RE, Bakkenes M, Beaumont LJ, Collingham YC, et al. Extinction risk from climate change. Nature. 2004;427(6970):145–148. pmid:14712274
  131. 131. Brooks TM, Mittermeier RA, da Fonseca GAB, Gerlach J, Hoffmann M, Lamoreux JF, et al. Global biodiversity conservation priorities. Science. 2006;313(5783):58–61. pmid:16825561
  132. 132. Wardle DA, Bardgett RD, Callaway RM, Van der Putten WH. Terrestrial ecosystem responses to species gains and losses. Science. 2011;332(6035):1273–1277. pmid:21659595
  133. 133. Cardinale BJ, Duffy JE, Gonzalez A, Hooper DU, Perrings C, Venail P, et al. Biodiversity loss and its impact on humanity. Nature. 2012;486(7401):59–67. pmid:22678280
  134. 134. Hooper DU, Adair EC, Cardinale BJ, Byrnes JEK, Hungate BA, Matulich KL, et al. A global synthesis reveals biodiversity loss as a major driver of ecosystem change. Nature. 2012;486(7401):105–108. pmid:22678289
  135. 135. Esmaeili HR, Masoudi M, Ebrahimi M, Amir E. Review of Aphanius farsicus: a critically endangered species (Teleostei: Cyprinodontidae) in Iran. Iranian Journal of Ichthyology. 2016;3(1):1–18.
  136. 136. Parenti LR. A taxonomic revision of the Andean killifish genus Orestias (Cyprinodontiformes, Cyprinodontidae). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 1984;178:107–2014.
  137. 137. Nei M. Genetic distance between populations. The American Naturalist. 1972;106(949):283–292.
  138. 138. Reichenbacher B, Kamrani E, Esmaeili HR, Teimori A. The endangered cyprinodont Aphanius ginaonis (Holly, 1929) from southern Iran is a valid species: evidence from otolith morphology. Environmental Biology of Fishes. 2009;86(4):507–521. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-009-9549-5
  139. 139. Darriba D, Taboada GL, Doallo R, Posada D. jModelTest 2: more models, new heuristics and parallel computing. Nature Methods. 2012;9(8):772. pmid:22847109