Genetic Structure of the Mangrove Killifish Kryptolebias hermaphroditus Costa, 2011 (Cyprinodontiformes: Aplocheiloidei) Supports A Wide Connection among its Populations

Zool Stud. 2022 Feb 23:60:e4. doi: 10.6620/ZS.2022.61-04. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

The Kryptolebias marmoratus species group is composed of the only three vertebrate species that lack females. These species present only males and simultaneously hermaphroditic individuals; that are able to reproduce by allogamy, with males, or by autogamy, performing self-fertilization and generating clones of themselves. The proportion of males is variable among those species and even among their populations. Kryptolebias hermaphroditus has the smallest proportion of males. Indeed, no males have been recorded in most known populations. This is a mainly autogamous species, with small populations having a disjunct distribution along the eastern and northern coast of Brazil. Species presenting such adaptations would be expected to have an elevated rate of genetic population structure, reflecting any barriers that obstruct gene flow between populations. Partial sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) gene from 335 individuals were sampled to perform a population analysis. Only a single haplotype of COI, widely distributed throughout all the sampled populations, was recovered for K. hermaphroditus. Here we hypothesize that the high degree of communication within populations is probably the main biological feature leading to this pattern.

Keywords: DNA-barcoding; Gene flow; Mitochondrial DNA; Neotropical; Self-fertilizing hermaphrodites; South America.