posted on 2020-04-08, 06:47authored byAlbert Chakona, Wilbert Kadye, Taurai Bere, Daniel Mazungula, Emmanuel Vreven
Stream fishes of the Eastern Afromontane region are among the least
studied vertebrates in this region, despite the potential for harbouring
cryptic diversity. The present study examined mitochondrial cytochrome
oxidase subunit I (COI) sequence divergence in 153 specimens of stream
fishes belonging to four genera and three families, [(Amphilius and Zaireichthys (Amphiliidae); Chiloglanis (Mochokidae); and Hippopotamyrus
(Mormyridae)], in the Eastern Zimbabwe Highlands (EZH) freshwater
ecoregion to explore the extent to which the current taxonomy conceals
the ichthyofaunal diversity in the region. The General Mixed Yule
Coalescent (GMYC) species delineation method identified 14 clusters
within five currently recognised ‘species’ from the EZH ecoregion. Only
one of these clusters represents a named species, while 13 of them
represent candidate or undescribed species. Our results revealed that
effective conservation of this region’s unique biota is limited by the
incomplete knowledge of taxonomic diversity and inaccurate mapping of
species distribution ranges.