Species-specific markers provide molecular genetic evidence for natural introgression of bullhead catfishes in Hungary

Since three bullhead catfish species were introduced to Europe in the late 19th century, they have spread to most European countries. In Hungary, the brown bullhead ( ) was more widespread in the 1970s-1980s, but the black bullhead ( ) has gradually supplanted since their second introduction in 1980...

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Veröffentlicht in:PeerJ (San Francisco, CA) CA), 2017-02, Vol.5, p.e2804-e2804, Article e2804
Hauptverfasser: Béres, Beatrix, Kánainé Sipos, Dóra, Müller, Tamás, Staszny, Ádám, Farkas, Milán, Bakos, Katalin, Orbán, László, Urbányi, Béla, Kovács, Balázs
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Since three bullhead catfish species were introduced to Europe in the late 19th century, they have spread to most European countries. In Hungary, the brown bullhead ( ) was more widespread in the 1970s-1980s, but the black bullhead ( ) has gradually supplanted since their second introduction in 1980. The introgressive hybridization of the two species has been presumed based on morphological examinations, but it has not previously been supported by genetic evidence. In this study, 11 different Hungarian habitats were screened with a new species-specific nuclear genetic, duplex PCR based, marker system to distinguish the introduced catfish species, , and , as well as the hybrids of the first two. More than 460 specimens were analyzed using the above markers and additional mitochondrial sequence analyses were also conducted on >25% of the individuals from each habitat sampled. The results showed that only 7.9% of the specimens from two habitats belonged to , and 92.1% were classified as of all habitats, whereas the presence of was not detected. Two specimens (>0.4%) showed the presence of both nuclear genomes and they were identified as hybrids of . An additional two individuals showed contradicting results from the nuclear and mitochondrial assays as a sign of a possible footprint of introgressive hybridization that might have happened two or more generations before. Surprisingly, the level of hybridization was much smaller than expected based on the analyses of the North American continent's indigenous stock from the hybrid zones. This phenomenon has been observed in several invasive fish species and it is regarded as an added level of complexity in the management of their rapid adaptation.
ISSN:2167-8359
2167-8359
DOI:10.7717/peerj.2804