Unexpected species diversity within Sri Lanka’s snakehead fishes of the Channa marulius group (Teleostei: Channidae)
Author
Sudasinghe, Hiranya
Author
Adamson, Eleanor A. S.
Author
Ranasinghe, R. H. Tharindu
Author
Meegaskumbura, Madhava
Author
Ikebe, Chiho
Author
Britz, Ralf
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-03-02
4747
1
113
132
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4747.1.4
d1d12eda-0dbe-46d4-97f9-95a9de472c8a
1175-5326
3693477
1F1FC50F-1C99-4EC8-8224-EA5FC67F1993
Channa ara
(
Deraniyagala, 1945
)
(Figure 2,3)
Ophicephalus marulius ara
:
Deraniyagala, 1945: 95
;
Deraniyagala, 1952: 124
(in part)
Ophiocephalus marulius
(not
Hamilton, 1822
):
Day, 1878: 363
(in part);
Day, 1889: 360
(in part)
Ophicephalus marulius
:
Deraniyagala, 1929: 83
(in part)
Channa marulius
:
Pethiyagoda, 1991: 279
(in part);
Talwar & Jhingran, 1991: 1017
(in part);
Courtenay & Williams, 2004: 83
(in part);
Chaudhry, 2010
(in part);
Kottelat, 2013: 461
(in part)
Channa ara
:
Pethiyagoda, 2006
(in part)
Diagnosis.
Channa ara
is distinguished from
C. marulius
,
C. aurolineata
and
C. auroflammea
by possessing fewer vertebrae (56 vs
59–63 in
C. marulius
;
63–66 in
C. aurolineata
;
58–61 in
C. auroflammea
); fewer lateral-line scales (59–62 vs
62–65 in
C. marulius
;
65–71 in
C. aurolineata
;
61–65 in
C. auroflammea
); fewer dorsal-fin rays (47–48 vs
50–56 in
C. marulius
;
55–58 in
C. aurolineata
;
52–54 in
C. auroflammea
); and fewer anal-fin rays (29–30 vs
32–37 in
C. marulius
;
35–38 in
C. aurolineata
;
33–36 in
C. auroflammea
). Further,
C. ara
can be distinguished from
C. aurolineata
and
C. marulioides
by white spots along mid-lateral blotches faint or absent (vs series of black scales rimmed in white along the mid-lateral dark blotches) in live adults. In comparison to South Indian
C. pseudomarulius
,
C. ara
possesses more vertebrae (56 vs 55); and more circumpeduncular scales (26–28 vs 24).
Channa ara
can be distinguished from
C.
cf.
ara
from the southwestern wet zone of
Sri Lanka
by having more circumpeduncular scales (26–28 vs 22–24); by the absence / faintness of the numerous large white spots along the mid-lateral dark blotches (vs. presence of spots in
C.
cf.
ara
); and by bright orange colouration in between the mid-lateral series of dark brown blotches when live (vs white to yellow colouration) (see
Figures 2–5
).
FIGURE 2.
Colouration of
Channa ara
shortly after preservation.
A
, adult, 2020.02.01.NH, neotype, 300 mm SL, Angammedilla, Mahaweli River;
B
, large adult, UPZM uncatalogued, 650 mm SL, Victoria Reservoir, Mahaweli River.
C,
Deraniyagala’s (1952
: plate 19) illustration of
Ophicephalus marulius ara
.
Description.
See
Figures 2
and
3
for general appearance, and
Tables 1
and
2
for morphometric and meristic data, respectively. Dorsal-fin rays 47 (1), or 48 (2). Anal-fin rays 29 (2), or 30 (1). Pectoral-fin rays 16. Lateral line scales 59 (1), 60 (1), or 62 (1) in total, 16 (1), 17 (1), or 18 (1) in pre-drop, 2 (1), or 3 (2) forming drop, 40 (1), or 41 (2) in post-drop. Predorsal scales 17 (2), or 18 (1). Scales above pre-drop 4.5 (2), or 5 (1), above post-drop 6.5 (1), 7 (1), or 7.5 (1), below post-drop 10 (2), or 11 (1). Circumpeduncular scales 26 (1) or 28 (2). Postorbital scales 10 (1), 11 (1), or 12 (1), with 7 (2), or 8 (1) scales in front of opercle; scales on opercle 3 (1), or 4 (2). Vertebrae 56 (
Fig. 6A
).
Colouration in preservative.
Shortly after preservation, adults>
300 mm
SL (
Figure 2
) with head and body greyish dorsolaterally, white ventrally. Dorsal, anal, and caudal fins black with scattered white spots. Pectoral fin dark brown, pelvic fin white. Series of 4–6 large black blotches on mid-lateral body under dorsal fin, separated by bright orange blotches. White spots on body inconspicuous or absent. Orange blotches on body fading to white during long-term preservation.
Colouration in life.
Juveniles of about
80–100 mm
SL (
Fig. 3A
) dorsolaterally brown. A black band on side of body, originating at anterior margin of snout, extending to caudal-fin base and beyond, onto median rays of caudal fin. Light brown stripe extending from opercle to caudal-fin base, separating brown dorsal side and blackish ventral side of body. Head and body whitish cream ventrally. Caudal fin with an ocellus on dorsal half, formed by large black spherical spot rimmed by wide orange ring. Pectoral, pelvic and anal fins hyaline. Interradial membrane of dorsal fin with irregular pattern of black lines. Pupil outlined by yellowish orange rim, iris black with tinge of orange.
Adults>
500 mm
SL (
Fig. 3B
) greyish black dorso-laterally. Black blotches on mid-lateral body, separated by bright orange blotches, extending as a ventro-lateral band along head and body. White spots on head and body absent or indistinct. Ocellus on caudal fin absent. Pupil outlined by yellowish orange rim, iris orange. Dorsal, anal and caudal fins black with white spots. Pectoral fin brownish black; rays of pelvic fin darker than in smaller specimens.
FIGURE 3.
Live colouration of
Channa ara
.
A
, juvenile, ~80 mm SL, Badulu Oya, Mahaweli River;
B
, large adult, ~650 mm SL, Victoria Reservoir, Mahaweli River, photo courtesy of Kumudu Wijesooriya.
Habitat, distribution and natural history.
Channa ara
occurs primarily in the deep pools in the Mahaweli River and its tributaries. It has also been recorded from reservoirs in the Mahaweli catchment (Victoria and Randenigala:
Fig. 1A
). In
June 2014
, the first author observed around
20 juveniles
of ~
80–100 mm
SL in shallow water (~
60–80 cm
deep), among submerged roots, close to the bank, at the mouth of a stream draining into Badulu Oya of the Mahaweli basin, they were guarded by a pair of adults. The highest elevation from which we have recorded
C. ara
is at Kandy, about
500 m
asl.
Molecular results.
Three
cox1
haplotypes were observed among Marulius group fishes collected in
Sri Lanka
, none of which have previously been observed in fishes collected in neighbouring continental regions. The three haplotypes correspond to
Channa ara
from the Mahaweli Basin (H1,
n
=4),
C.
cf.
ara
from the southwestern wet zone (H2,
n
=8), and
C. marulius
from the northern dry zone (H3,
n
=1). The relationship of Sri Lankan haplotypes to
C. marulius
haplotypes from continental regions (
India
and
Myanmar
) is illustrated in
Fig. 1B
, with uncorrected pairwise genetic distances among all members of the Marulius group given in
Table 3
.
The
Channa ara cox
1
haplotype differs from all [
C. marulius
+
C.
cf.
ara
] haplotypes by a minimum of 22 mutations, and is indeed marginally more genetically similar to continental
C. marulius
(3.6–4.2%) and Sri Lankan
C.
cf.
ara
(3.7%) than to Sri Lankan
C. marulius
(4.6%), albeit the latter was only represented by a small sample size. The Sri Lankan
C. marulius
differs from continental
C. marulius
by 1.6–2.3%, doubling the known intraspecific genetic divergence at
cox1
that was previously observed across this species’ large continental geographical distribution encompassing
India
and western
Myanmar
. In contrast, the Sri Lankan
C.
cf.
ara
differs less from continental
C. marulius
(uncorrected pairwise genetic distance of 1.0–1.6%) than it does from the
C. marulius
that occurs on the same island, in Sri Lanka’s northern dry zone (2.0%).
With the exceptions of
Channa marulius
and
C.
cf.
ara
,
C. ara
differs from all other species in the Marulius group by a minimum of 8% uncorrected pairwise genetic distance for
cox1
(
Table 3
).