Review of the genus Cobitis in the Middle East, with the description of eight new species (Teleostei: Cobitidae)
Author
Freyhof, Jörg
Author
Bayçelebi, Esra
Author
Geiger, Matthias
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-12-21
4535
1
1
75
journal article
27727
10.11646/zootaxa.4535.1.1
a047bcd9-ab65-4e3f-b07a-c830c7af1072
1175-5326
2615773
ABE9DB1F-7378-4571-90C4-A3FDB66527F3
Cobitis splendens
Erk'akan,
Atalay-Ekmekçi & Nalbant, 1998
(
Fig. 25
)
Cobitis splendens
Erk'akan,
Atalay-Ekmekçi & Nalbant, 1998
: 11, fig. 3 (
type
locality:
Turkey
: small tributary to Black Sea, about
200 m
from sea shore,
16 km
east of Akçakoca [41.083, 31.116] and about
30 km
south-west of Ereğli).
Material examined.
FSJF 2487
,
18
,
46–86
mm
SL;
Turkey
:
Düzce
prov.: stream Kovukkavla about
20 km
east of
Akçakoca
, 41.149 31.354.—FFR 5552, 25,
52–70 mm
SL;
Turkey
:
Düzce
prov.: stream Büyük Melen
17 km
west of
Düzce
, 40.763 30.962.
Material used in molecular genetic analysis.
FSJF
DNA-882
;
Turkey
:
Düzce
prov.: stream
Kovukkavla
about
20 km
east of
Akçakoca
, 41.149 31.354. (GenBank accession numbers:
KJ
553059
,
KJ552919
,
KP
050522
)
.—
FSJF
DNA-2911
;
Turkey
:
Düzce
prov.: stream
Büyük Melen
17 km
west of
Düzce
, 40.763 30.962. (GenBank accession numbers:
MH
795385
,
MH
795386
,
MH
795387
)
.
Diagnosis.
Cobitis splendens
is distinguished from all other
Cobitis
species in the Black Sea basin by a combination of characters, none of them unique.
Cobitis splendens
is superficially similar to
C. satunini
but both species are not closely related.
Cobitis splendens
is distinguished from
C. satunini
as well as from
C. tanaitica
,
C. elongatoides
and
C. pontica
, three related species from Europe, by the pigmentation in Z3 reduced to about head length in the male (vs. complete, reaching further behind the dorsal-fin base). While this is a very constant character state in
C. splendens
, in very few male
C. satunini
, the pigmentation in Z3 is reduced making it impossible to distinguish these individuals from
C. splendens
.
Cobitis splendens
is distinguished from
C. saniae
by having the base of the single lamina circularis narrowly connected to the adjacent pectoral-fin ray (vs. widely connected). It is further distinguished from many populations of
C. saniae
by having roundish or irregularly squarish blotches in Z4 anterior to the dorsal-fin origin, rarely fused into one stripe (vs. horizontally elongate, often very densely set and regularly fused into short or longer stripes).
Cobitis splendens
is distinguished from
C. puncticulata
from the Marmara Sea basin by blotches in Z2 and Z4 well separated and large (vs. very small, indistinct or confluent), flank un-pigmented below Z4 (vs. pigmented) and pale yellowish or whitish body (vs. brownish). It is distinguished from
C. simplicispina
by having one lamina circularis in the male (vs. two).
Distribution.
Cobitis splendens
has been confirmed from its
type
locality, the stream Kovukkavla about
16 km
east of Akçakoca (Black Sea) and the population from the Büyük Melen River [entering Black Sea at 41.073, 30.967] in northern
Anatolia
might be identified as
C. splendens
.
Remarks.
A reduced pigmentation in Z
3 in
the male is very characteristic for
C. splendens
and was mentioned as a diagnostic character by Erk'akan
et al
. (1998). This character state is not unique to
C. splendens
, but individual males with a very much reduced or even no pigmentation in Z3 are found in many other
Cobitis
species.
During this study, we found a population of
Cobitis
in the Büyük Melen River (Black Sea basin) which was identified as
C. splendens
by their COI barcoding sequence. But in this population, the pigmentation in Z3 is not reduced in the males and we found no constant character to distinguish this species from
C. satunini
. It is distinguished by the small focal zone in the subdorsal scales (vs. large) and the large black spot at the caudal-fin base (vs. small) from
C. taenia
. If this identification would be correct,
C. splendens
would be very difficult to identify and might represent a real cryptic species. More materials is needed to better understand its variability in colour pattern. We would not be surprised, if the population in the Büyük Melen River would not consist of pure
C. splendens
, but it might represent a hybrid complex of
C. splendens
and
C. satunini
(or
C. taenia
). We found
C. taenia
geographically adjacent to the Büyük Melen River and
C. taenia
is well known to form hybrids with other species of the
C. taenia
species group (
C. elongatoides
,
C. tanaitica
) (see
Janko
et al
. 2007a
+
b
for an overview). More data are needed to test for a hybrid complex in the Büyük Melen River
Cobitis
.
Molecular data (
Fig. 1
) place
C. splendens
in the
C. taenia
species group (
C. avicennae
,
C. elongatoides
,
C. emrei
,
C. fahireae
,
C. faridpaki
,
C. pontica
,
C. puncticulata
,
C. satunini
,
C. saniae
,
C. splendens
,
C. tanaitica
,
C. taurica
and
C. vardarensis
). Based on DNA barcoding it is well separated from all other included
Cobitis
and by a minimum K2P distance of 2.8% to
C. emrei
. The PTP approach delimited it as own entity.
See below for details to distinguish
C. splendens
from
C. emrei
. All species of the
C. taenia
group except
C. puncticulata
are very similar in colour pattern and other external characters and represent a cryptic species complex very difficult to distinguish from each other. Molecular data strongly support the view that at all but
C. pontica
represent own species. It is beyond the aim of this study to re-examine
C. pontica
, as we have no comparative materials. This species is very similar based on the DNA barcodes we compared to
C. elongatoides
, but has been distinguished from
C. elongatoides
by having 90 chromosome arms (vs.
96 in
C. elongatoides
), a character not been studied in Anatolian
Cobitis
(Vasil'eva & Vasiliev 2006).
Erk'akan
et al
. (1998) reported
C. splendens
also from the lower Bakır River drainage in the northern
Aegean
Sea basin, from the upper Simav River drainage in the southern Marmara Sea basin and from the stream Karadere, east of
Trabzon
on the eastern Black Sea coast. We did not find
C. splendens
outside of the Kavukkavlağı River and suspect, that Erk'akan
et al
. (1998) misidentified these
Cobitis
, maybe based on single males with a reduced pigmentation in Z3. We suspect that these populations should be identified as
C. fahireae
(Bakır)
,
C. taenia
(Simav)
and
C. satunini
(
Trabzon
)
. However, we strongly encourage dense fieldwork in the area to explore, if
C. splendens
might have a larger distribution range.