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Mangrove rivulus

The mangrove rivulus or mangrove killifish, Kryptolebias marmoratus (syn. Rivulus marmoratus),[2][3] is a species of killifish in the family Rivulidae. It lives in brackish and marine waters (less frequently in fresh water) along the coasts of Florida, through the Antilles, and along the eastern and northern Atlantic coasts of Mexico, Central America and South America (south to Brazil).[1][2] It has a very wide tolerance of both salinity (0–68 )[4] and temperature (12–38 °C or 54–100 °F),[5] can survive for about two months on land,[6] and mostly breeds by self-fertilization.[7] It is typically found in areas with red mangrove and sometimes lives in burrows of Cardisoma guanhumi crabs.[5]

Mangrove rivulus
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Cyprinodontiformes
Family: Rivulidae
Genus: Kryptolebias
Species:
K. marmoratus
Binomial name
Kryptolebias marmoratus
(Poey, 1880)
Synonyms[2]
  • Rivulus marmoratus Poey, 1880
  • Rivulus heyei Nichols, 1914
  • Rivulus bonairensis Hoedeman, 1958
  • Rivulus garciai de la Cruz & Dubitsky, 1976

The mangrove rivulus is up to 7.5 cm (3.0 in) long,[2] but most individuals are 1–3.8 cm (0.4–1.5 in).[4]

Overall the mangrove rivulus is widespread and not threatened,[1] but in the United States it is considered a Species of Concern by the National Marine Fisheries Service.[8]

Ecology edit

Land living edit

The mangrove rivulus can spend up to 66 consecutive days out of water, which it typically spends inside fallen logs, breathing air through its skin.[6][9] It enters burrows created by insects inside trees where it relaxes its territorial, aggressive behavior. During this time, it alters its gills so it can retain water and nutrients, while nitrogen waste is excreted through the skin. The change is reversed once it re-enters the water.[6]

When jumping on land, the mangrove rivulus does a "tail flip", flipping its head over its body towards the tail end. The rivulus' jumping technique gives it an ability to direct its jumps on land and to make relatively forceful jumps. A team of scientists associated with the Society for Experimental Biology released a video in 2013 showing the jumping technique.[10]

Breeding edit

 
Mangrove rivulus in Guadeloupe

Spawning has not yet been observed in the wild in the mangrove rivulus, but captive studies show that the eggs are positioned in shallow water, sometimes even in places that periodically are on land during low tide. The eggs can continue their development when out of water, but once they are ready to hatch this is delayed until again submerged.[11][12]

The species consists mostly of hermaphrodites which are known to reproduce by self-fertilization, but males do exist,[7] and strong genetic evidence indicates occasional outcrossing.[13] The concentration of males to hermaphrodites can vary depending on the local requirement for genetic diversity (for example, if an increase in the local parasite population occurred, secondary male numbers might increase).[14] In Florida, almost all (>99%) are homozygous clones, but in highly colonized South and Central American pools males typically are 3 to 8% of the population, and in offshore cays in Belize 20 to 25% are males.[5]

K. marmoratus produces eggs and sperm by meiosis and routinely reproduces by self-fertilization.[15] Each individual hermaphrodite normally fertilizes itself when an egg and sperm that it has produced by an internal organ unite inside the fish's body.[16] In nature, this mode of reproduction can yield highly homozygous lines composed of individuals so genetically uniform as to be, in effect, identical to one another.[17][18] The capacity for self-fertilization in these fishes has apparently persisted for at least several hundred thousand years.[19] Meioses that lead to self-fertilization can reduce genetic fitness by causing inbreeding depression. However, self-fertilization does provide the benefit of “fertilization assurance” (reproductive assurance) at each generation.[17] Meiosis can also provide the adaptive benefit of efficient recombinational repair of DNA damages during formation of germ cells at each generation.[20] This benefit may have prevented the evolutionary replacement of meiosis and selfing by a simpler type of clonal reproduction such as ameiotic or apomictic parthenogenesis. Adults may cannibalize juveniles, but only unrelated offspring.[21]

Epigenetic studies edit

Because K. marmoratus can reproduce consistently by self-fertilization, it gives rise to isogenic lineages. These lineages afford the opportunity to explicitly investigate epigenetic phenotypic effects in genetically identical individuals.[22] Epigenetic changes due to DNA methylation were studied, and specific patterns of DNA methylation at CpG sites in adults and during development were found to occur.[22]

Conservation edit

Overall the mangrove rivulus is widespread and not threatened,[1] but in the United States it is considered a Species of Concern by the National Marine Fisheries Service.[8] It is considered a species of Least Concern by the IUCN,[1] and was formerly listed as a species of special concern in Florida, but has since been delisted.[4] It was formerly often overlooked and considered rare in Florida, but surveys have revealed that it is locally common in this state and abundant in the Florida Keys.[1] It is considered vulnerable by the American Fisheries Society.[citation needed]

The mangrove rivulus is considered to have potential as a bioindicator species of estuary habitats.[1]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g NatureServe; Lyons, T.J. (2019). "Kryptolebias marmoratus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2019: e.T19735A131005753. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-2.RLTS.T19735A131005753.en. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2023). "Kryptolebias marmoratus" in FishBase. February 2023 version.
  3. ^ Ong, K. J.; Stevens, E. D.; Wright, P. A. (2007). "Gill morphology of the mangrove killifish (Kryptolebias marmoratus) is plastic and changes in response to terrestrial air exposure". Journal of Experimental Biology. 210 (7): 1109–15. doi:10.1242/jeb.002238. PMID 17371909.
  4. ^ a b c Bester, C: Mangrove Rivulus. Florida Museum. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
  5. ^ a b c Hill, K: Rivulus marmoratus. Smithsonian Marine Station at Fort Pierce. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
  6. ^ a b c "Tropical fish can live for months out of water", Reuters, Wed Nov 14, 2007 9:05pm GMT
  7. ^ a b Lublnski, B. A.; Davis, W. P.; Taylor, D. S.; Turner, B. J. (1995). "Outcrossing in a natural population of a self-fertilizing hermaphroditic fish". Journal of Heredity. 86 (6): 469–473. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a111623.
  8. ^ a b National Marine Fisheries Service (23 February 2017). Species of Concern List. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
  9. ^ Taylor, D. Scott; Turner, Bruce J.; Davis, William P.; Chapman, Ben B. (February 2008). "A novel terrestrial fish habitat inside emergent logs". The American Naturalist. 171 (2): 263–266. doi:10.1086/524960. hdl:10919/49125. ISSN 1537-5323. PMID 18197778. S2CID 46035347. Retrieved 4 April 2022.
  10. ^ Tail-Flipping Fish Hops on Land on YouTube
  11. ^ Taylor, D.S. (2012). "Twenty-four years in the mud: what have we learned about the natural history and ecology of the mangrove rivulus, Kryptolebias marmoratus?". Integrative and Comparative Biology. 52 (6): 724–736. doi:10.1093/icb/ics062. PMC 3501094. PMID 22576816.
  12. ^ Martin, K.L.; A.L. Carter (2013). "Brave new propagules: terrestrial embryos in anamniotic eggs". Integrative and Comparative Biology. 53 (2): 233–247. doi:10.1093/icb/ict018. PMID 23604618.
  13. ^ MacKiewicz, M.; Tatarenkov, A.; Turner, B. J.; Avise, J. C. (2006). "A mixed-mating strategy in a hermaphroditic vertebrate". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 273 (1600): 2449–52. doi:10.1098/rspb.2006.3594. PMC 1634907. PMID 16959634.
  14. ^ Cole, Kathleen S.; Noakes, David L. G. (1 January 1997). "Gonadal development and sexual allocation in mangrove killifish, Rivulus marmoratus (Pisces: Atherinomorpha)". Copeia. 1997 (3): 596–600. doi:10.2307/1447566. JSTOR 1447566.
  15. ^ Harrington, Robert W. (1963-10-01). "Twenty-four-hour rhythms of internal self-fertilization and of oviposition by hermaphrodites of Rivulus marmoratus". Physiological Zoology. 36 (4): 325–341. doi:10.1086/physzool.36.4.30152746. S2CID 85957196.
  16. ^ Sakakura, Yoshitaka; Soyano, Kiyoshi; Noakes, David L.G.; Hagiwara, Atsushi (2006). "Gonadal morphology in the self-fertilizing mangrove killifish, Kryptolebias marmoratus". Ichthyological Research. 53 (4): 427–430. doi:10.1007/s10228-006-0362-2. hdl:10069/35713. S2CID 9474211.
  17. ^ a b Avise JC, Tatarenkov A (November 2012). "Allard's argument versus Baker's contention for the adaptive significance of selfing in a hermaphroditic fish". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 109 (46): 18862–7. doi:10.1073/pnas.1217202109. PMC 3503157. PMID 23112206.
  18. ^ Earley RL, Hanninen AF, Fuller A, Garcia MJ, Lee EA (December 2012). "Phenotypic plasticity and integration in the mangrove rivulus (Kryptolebias marmoratus): a prospectus". Integrative and Comparative Biology. 52 (6): 814–27. doi:10.1093/icb/ics118. PMC 3501102. PMID 22990587.
  19. ^ Tatarenkov A, Lima SM, Taylor DS, Avise JC (August 2009). "Long-term retention of self-fertilization in a fish clade". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 106 (34): 14456–9. doi:10.1073/pnas.0907852106. PMC 2732792. PMID 19706532.
  20. ^ Bernstein H, Byerly HC, Hopf FA, Michod RE. Genetic damage, mutation, and the evolution of sex. Science. 1985 Sep 20;229(4719):1277-81. doi: 10.1126/science.3898363. PMID 3898363
  21. ^ Wells, Michael W.; Wright, Patricia A. (2017-10-01). "Do not eat your kids: embryonic kin recognition in an amphibious fish". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 71 (10): 140. doi:10.1007/s00265-017-2360-y. ISSN 0340-5443. S2CID 34001850.
  22. ^ a b Fellous A, Labed-Veydert T, Locrel M, Voisin AS, Earley RL, Silvestre F. DNA methylation in adults and during development of the self-fertilizing mangrove rivulus, Kryptolebias marmoratus. Ecol Evol. 2018 May 15;8(12):6016-6033. doi: 10.1002/ece3.4141. PMID 29988456; PMCID: PMC6024129

External links edit

mangrove, rivulus, mangrove, rivulus, mangrove, killifish, kryptolebias, marmoratus, rivulus, marmoratus, species, killifish, family, rivulidae, lives, brackish, marine, waters, less, frequently, fresh, water, along, coasts, florida, through, antilles, along, . The mangrove rivulus or mangrove killifish Kryptolebias marmoratus syn Rivulus marmoratus 2 3 is a species of killifish in the family Rivulidae It lives in brackish and marine waters less frequently in fresh water along the coasts of Florida through the Antilles and along the eastern and northern Atlantic coasts of Mexico Central America and South America south to Brazil 1 2 It has a very wide tolerance of both salinity 0 68 4 and temperature 12 38 C or 54 100 F 5 can survive for about two months on land 6 and mostly breeds by self fertilization 7 It is typically found in areas with red mangrove and sometimes lives in burrows of Cardisoma guanhumi crabs 5 Mangrove rivulus Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Actinopterygii Order Cyprinodontiformes Family Rivulidae Genus Kryptolebias Species K marmoratus Binomial name Kryptolebias marmoratus Poey 1880 Synonyms 2 Rivulus marmoratus Poey 1880 Rivulus heyei Nichols 1914 Rivulus bonairensis Hoedeman 1958 Rivulus garciai de la Cruz amp Dubitsky 1976 The mangrove rivulus is up to 7 5 cm 3 0 in long 2 but most individuals are 1 3 8 cm 0 4 1 5 in 4 Overall the mangrove rivulus is widespread and not threatened 1 but in the United States it is considered a Species of Concern by the National Marine Fisheries Service 8 Contents 1 Ecology 1 1 Land living 1 2 Breeding 2 Epigenetic studies 3 Conservation 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksEcology editLand living edit The mangrove rivulus can spend up to 66 consecutive days out of water which it typically spends inside fallen logs breathing air through its skin 6 9 It enters burrows created by insects inside trees where it relaxes its territorial aggressive behavior During this time it alters its gills so it can retain water and nutrients while nitrogen waste is excreted through the skin The change is reversed once it re enters the water 6 When jumping on land the mangrove rivulus does a tail flip flipping its head over its body towards the tail end The rivulus jumping technique gives it an ability to direct its jumps on land and to make relatively forceful jumps A team of scientists associated with the Society for Experimental Biology released a video in 2013 showing the jumping technique 10 Breeding edit nbsp Mangrove rivulus in Guadeloupe Spawning has not yet been observed in the wild in the mangrove rivulus but captive studies show that the eggs are positioned in shallow water sometimes even in places that periodically are on land during low tide The eggs can continue their development when out of water but once they are ready to hatch this is delayed until again submerged 11 12 The species consists mostly of hermaphrodites which are known to reproduce by self fertilization but males do exist 7 and strong genetic evidence indicates occasional outcrossing 13 The concentration of males to hermaphrodites can vary depending on the local requirement for genetic diversity for example if an increase in the local parasite population occurred secondary male numbers might increase 14 In Florida almost all gt 99 are homozygous clones but in highly colonized South and Central American pools males typically are 3 to 8 of the population and in offshore cays in Belize 20 to 25 are males 5 K marmoratus produces eggs and sperm by meiosis and routinely reproduces by self fertilization 15 Each individual hermaphrodite normally fertilizes itself when an egg and sperm that it has produced by an internal organ unite inside the fish s body 16 In nature this mode of reproduction can yield highly homozygous lines composed of individuals so genetically uniform as to be in effect identical to one another 17 18 The capacity for self fertilization in these fishes has apparently persisted for at least several hundred thousand years 19 Meioses that lead to self fertilization can reduce genetic fitness by causing inbreeding depression However self fertilization does provide the benefit of fertilization assurance reproductive assurance at each generation 17 Meiosis can also provide the adaptive benefit of efficient recombinational repair of DNA damages during formation of germ cells at each generation 20 This benefit may have prevented the evolutionary replacement of meiosis and selfing by a simpler type of clonal reproduction such as ameiotic or apomictic parthenogenesis Adults may cannibalize juveniles but only unrelated offspring 21 Epigenetic studies editBecause K marmoratus can reproduce consistently by self fertilization it gives rise to isogenic lineages These lineages afford the opportunity to explicitly investigate epigenetic phenotypic effects in genetically identical individuals 22 Epigenetic changes due to DNA methylation were studied and specific patterns of DNA methylation at CpG sites in adults and during development were found to occur 22 Conservation editOverall the mangrove rivulus is widespread and not threatened 1 but in the United States it is considered a Species of Concern by the National Marine Fisheries Service 8 It is considered a species of Least Concern by the IUCN 1 and was formerly listed as a species of special concern in Florida but has since been delisted 4 It was formerly often overlooked and considered rare in Florida but surveys have revealed that it is locally common in this state and abundant in the Florida Keys 1 It is considered vulnerable by the American Fisheries Society citation needed The mangrove rivulus is considered to have potential as a bioindicator species of estuary habitats 1 See also editAmphibious fish Androdioecy Climbing gourami Mudskipper Walking catfish Walking fishReferences edit a b c d e f g NatureServe Lyons T J 2019 Kryptolebias marmoratus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T19735A131005753 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 2 RLTS T19735A131005753 en Retrieved 16 November 2021 a b c d Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2023 Kryptolebias marmoratus in FishBase February 2023 version Ong K J Stevens E D Wright P A 2007 Gill morphology of the mangrove killifish Kryptolebias marmoratus is plastic and changes in response to terrestrial air exposure Journal of Experimental Biology 210 7 1109 15 doi 10 1242 jeb 002238 PMID 17371909 a b c Bester C Mangrove Rivulus Florida Museum Retrieved 6 May 2017 a b c Hill K Rivulus marmoratus Smithsonian Marine Station at Fort Pierce Retrieved 6 May 2017 a b c Tropical fish can live for months out of water Reuters Wed Nov 14 2007 9 05pm GMT a b Lublnski B A Davis W P Taylor D S Turner B J 1995 Outcrossing in a natural population of a self fertilizing hermaphroditic fish Journal of Heredity 86 6 469 473 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals jhered a111623 a b National Marine Fisheries Service 23 February 2017 Species of Concern List Retrieved 6 May 2017 Taylor D Scott Turner Bruce J Davis William P Chapman Ben B February 2008 A novel terrestrial fish habitat inside emergent logs The American Naturalist 171 2 263 266 doi 10 1086 524960 hdl 10919 49125 ISSN 1537 5323 PMID 18197778 S2CID 46035347 Retrieved 4 April 2022 Tail Flipping Fish Hops on Land on YouTube Taylor D S 2012 Twenty four years in the mud what have we learned about the natural history and ecology of the mangrove rivulus Kryptolebias marmoratus Integrative and Comparative Biology 52 6 724 736 doi 10 1093 icb ics062 PMC 3501094 PMID 22576816 Martin K L A L Carter 2013 Brave new propagules terrestrial embryos in anamniotic eggs Integrative and Comparative Biology 53 2 233 247 doi 10 1093 icb ict018 PMID 23604618 MacKiewicz M Tatarenkov A Turner B J Avise J C 2006 A mixed mating strategy in a hermaphroditic vertebrate Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 273 1600 2449 52 doi 10 1098 rspb 2006 3594 PMC 1634907 PMID 16959634 Cole Kathleen S Noakes David L G 1 January 1997 Gonadal development and sexual allocation in mangrove killifish Rivulus marmoratus Pisces Atherinomorpha Copeia 1997 3 596 600 doi 10 2307 1447566 JSTOR 1447566 Harrington Robert W 1963 10 01 Twenty four hour rhythms of internal self fertilization and of oviposition by hermaphrodites of Rivulus marmoratus Physiological Zoology 36 4 325 341 doi 10 1086 physzool 36 4 30152746 S2CID 85957196 Sakakura Yoshitaka Soyano Kiyoshi Noakes David L G Hagiwara Atsushi 2006 Gonadal morphology in the self fertilizing mangrove killifish Kryptolebias marmoratus Ichthyological Research 53 4 427 430 doi 10 1007 s10228 006 0362 2 hdl 10069 35713 S2CID 9474211 a b Avise JC Tatarenkov A November 2012 Allard s argument versus Baker s contention for the adaptive significance of selfing in a hermaphroditic fish Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109 46 18862 7 doi 10 1073 pnas 1217202109 PMC 3503157 PMID 23112206 Earley RL Hanninen AF Fuller A Garcia MJ Lee EA December 2012 Phenotypic plasticity and integration in the mangrove rivulus Kryptolebias marmoratus a prospectus Integrative and Comparative Biology 52 6 814 27 doi 10 1093 icb ics118 PMC 3501102 PMID 22990587 Tatarenkov A Lima SM Taylor DS Avise JC August 2009 Long term retention of self fertilization in a fish clade Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 106 34 14456 9 doi 10 1073 pnas 0907852106 PMC 2732792 PMID 19706532 Bernstein H Byerly HC Hopf FA Michod RE Genetic damage mutation and the evolution of sex Science 1985 Sep 20 229 4719 1277 81 doi 10 1126 science 3898363 PMID 3898363 Wells Michael W Wright Patricia A 2017 10 01 Do not eat your kids embryonic kin recognition in an amphibious fish Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 71 10 140 doi 10 1007 s00265 017 2360 y ISSN 0340 5443 S2CID 34001850 a b Fellous A Labed Veydert T Locrel M Voisin AS Earley RL Silvestre F DNA methylation in adults and during development of the self fertilizing mangrove rivulus Kryptolebias marmoratus Ecol Evol 2018 May 15 8 12 6016 6033 doi 10 1002 ece3 4141 PMID 29988456 PMCID PMC6024129External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kryptolebias marmoratus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mangrove rivulus amp oldid 1181875210, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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