Original paper

Peculiar occurrence of Cobitis bilineata Canestrini, 1865 and Sabanejewia larvata (De Filippi, 1859) (Cobitidae, Actinopteri) in the Danube River basin in Croatia

Buj, Ivana; Mustafić, Perica; Ćaleta, Marko; Marčić, Zoran; Ivić, Lucija; Žalac, Sanja; Zanella, Davor; Karlović, Roman; Horvatić, Sven; Raguž, Lucija

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Fundamental and Applied Limnology Volume 194 Nr. 3 (2021), p. 201 - 213

31 references

published: Jan 21, 2021
published online: Jan 31, 2020
manuscript accepted: Nov 20, 2019
manuscript revision received: Nov 13, 2019
manuscript revision requested: Oct 16, 2019
manuscript received: Aug 23, 2019

DOI: 10.1127/fal/2020/1272

BibTeX file

ArtNo. ESP141019403004, Price: 29.00 €

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Abstract

Plitvice Lakes National Park, the most famous national park in Croatia, is located in the karstic region of Croatia, but belongs to the Black Sea watershed. Its ichthyofauna is mostly comprised of Danubian elements and it was not considered to comprise any endemic species. Although representatives of the family Cobitidae (loaches) were reported for Plitvice Lakes in some older reports, they were usually identified as Cobitis elongatoides. Here, we report a more detailed analysis (on morphological, as well as molecular genetic level) of loaches from the Plitvice Lakes. Surprisingly, all analyses conducted confirmed that they actually belong to two species in two different genera that were previously never reported outside the Adriatic watershed: C. bilineata and Sabanejewia larvata. Both species have restricted distribution ranges: S. larvata was thought to be distributed only in Italy, while the proposed distribution range of C. bilineata comprised Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Switzerland and France. Since this is the first record of S. larvata in Croatia and the second for C. bilineata (previously it was known only from the Zrmanja River in Dalmatia), both species are now listed as Natura 2000 target species for Plitvice Lakes National Park in order to ensure their adequate protection. Interestingly, although sequences of both species are similar to Italian C. bilineata and S. larvata, they are not the same (with the exception of one S. larvata haplotype), opposing the hypothesis of anthropogenic translocation.

Keywords

Italian golden loach • Italian spined loach • morphology • Natura 2000 • phylogeny • Plitvice Lakes National Park