Development Of Microsatellite Loci And Population Genetics In The Bumblebee Catfish Species Pseudopimelodus Atricaudus And Pseudopimelodus Magnus (Siluriformes: Pseudopimelodidae)

NEOTROPICAL ICHTHYOLOGY(2021)

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Abstract
The Neotropical freshwater catfish Pseudopimelodus atricaudus and Pseudopimelodus magnus are two recently discovered species endemic to the Colombian Magdalena-Cauca River basin. In this study, a set of 13 microsatellite loci were developed by using next generation sequence technology to assess the genetic diversity and population structure in P. atricaudus and test for cross-species amplification in P. magnus. Both species exhibited high genetic diversity (P. atricaudus: Na: 9.000 - 9.769 alleles/locus, Ho: 0.760 - 0.804, H-E: 0.804 - 0.840; P. magnus: Na: 12.8 - 5.4 alleles/locus, Ho: 0.638 - 0.683, H-E: 0.747 - 0.755) compared to the mean levels of genetic diversity reported for Neotropical Siluriformes, and lack of genetic differentiation among sampling sites within the Cauca River (P. atricaudus: F'(ST)=0.013 - 0.017, P > 0.05, D'(est)=-0.004 - 0.023, P > 0.05; P. magnus: F'(ST)=0.031, P=0.055; D'(est)=0.045, P=0.058). This work is the first insight on the diversity and the population genetics of species of the family Pseudopimelodidae and provides a framework to further population genetic and conservation analyses needed in this poorly studied family at the microevolutionary level.
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Key words
Colombia, Freshwater fish, Gene flow, Genetic diversity, Magdalena-Cauca basin
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