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 bilseli
Battalgil, 1942
(
Fig. 7
)
Cobitis bilseli
Battalgil, 1942: 292
, fig. 4 (
type
locality:
Turkey
: Lake Beyşehir).
Material examined.
FSJF 1952
,
5
,
93–140
mm
SL;
Turkey
:
Konya
prov.: stream
Sarıöz
at
İsaköy
about
9 km
northeast of
Beyşehir
, 37.748 31.780
.—
FSJF 2526
,
4
,
55–133
mm
SL;
Turkey
:
Konya
prov.: stream
Sarıçay
4 km
north of
Beyşehir
, 37.715 31.708
.—
FSJF 2624
,
3
,
130–
165
mm SL;
Turkey
:
Konya
prov.: outlet of
Lake Beyşehir
below dam in
Beyşehir
, 37.680 31.722
.
Material used in molecular genetic analysis.
FSJF
DNA-55
;
Turkey
:
Konya
prov.: stream
Sarıöz
at
İsaköy
about
9 km
northeast of
Beyşehir
, 37.748 31.780. (GenBank accession numbers:
KJ
553049
,
KJ552872
,
KJ
553073
)
.
Diagnosis.
Male
Cobitis bilseli
are distinguished from male
C. battalgilae
and all other
Cobitis
species known from the endorheic basins in Central
Anatolia
as well as from the Mediterranean Sea basin east of the Eşen River by having one lamina circularis on the pectoral fin (vs. two) and a short skin-flap before the genital papilla (vs. absent).
FIGURE 7.
Cobitis bilseli
not preserved, about 190 mm SL; Turkey: Beyşehir canal.
Distribution.
Cobitis bilseli
occurs in the Lake Beyşehir basin, where it inhabits the streams Sarıöz (Eylikler) and Sarıçay north of Beyşehir (and maybe others).
Cobitis bilseli
is seasonally found in the outlet of Lake Beyşehir below the dam in Beyşehir city, when the water flows over from the lake. It also occurs in the river flowing from Lake Beyşehir to Lake Suğla (Baran Yoğurtçuoğlu, pers. comm. 2017) and might be more widespread in the area.
Remarks.
Cobitis bilseli
is an unusual species, not only being the largest species of the genus, reaching
195 mm
SL (Erk'akan
et al
. 1998). It has only one lamina circularis, despite which
Bohlen
et al
. (2006)
,
Geiger
et al.
(2014)
and Perdices
et al.
(2016, 2018) found it to be related to the species of the
C. simplicispina
species group (
C. battalgilae
,
C. dorademiri
,
C. joergbohleni
,
C. phrygica
,
C. pirii
,
C. simplicispina
,
C. sipahilerae
,
C. turcica
) all having two laminae circularis. Erk'akan
et al
. (1998) pointed out that the first unbranched pectoral ray is thickened just where the other species have the second lamina circularis. In contrast to all other
Cobitis
species with one lamina circularis, its lamina circularis is strongly osseous, as in others of the
C. simplicispina
species group (vs. thin, scale-like) and in adult males there is a skin-flap before the genital papilla (vs. absent in other
Cobitis
). Due to these characters, Erk'akan
et al.
(1998) placed
C. bilseli
in a separate subgenus:
Beyshehiria
. They suspected
C. bilseli
to be a relict lineage related to Siberian
Cobitis
species.
Bohlen
et al
. (2006)
, however, rejected this hypothesis and it seems more likely that
C. bilseli
has evolved from an ancestor it shared with other Central Anatolian
Cobitis
. Based on DNA barcoding,
Cobitis bilseli
is well separated from all other included
Cobitis
, and by a minimum K2P distance of 2.5% to
C. pirii
, also supported as PTP entity.