Autoria  Peixoto, Marilena da Silva
Data de publicação  9/8/2011
Idioma  Português
Editor  USP
Coleção  Teses e Dissertações
DOI  10.11606/T.41.2011.tde-24102011-102830

Pimelodella Eigenmann & Eigenmann, 1888 is one of the most specious genus of the Siluriform family Heptapteridae, with 71 species distributed from southern South America to Panamá and Central America. The understanding of phylogenetic relationships within the genus is somewhat confusing due to the difficulties in morphological identification and its broad distribution. In order to assess the problems with species identification and phylogenetic relationships our work employed morphological and molecular tools is it is organized in four chapters. The first chapter contains an introduction to the problems and a revision of what its known in Pimelodella, as well as a brief description of the tools used. The second chapter deals with species identification and its subdivided into: morphology and the used of DNA barcoding. The results obtained with the combination of these two methodologies indicated, for example, that Pimelodella gracilis might comprise more than one species. The third chapter presents a phylogenetic analysis of the species included in this work based on nucleotide sequences of the mitochondrial genome. The parsimony analysis recovered six most parsimonious trees as expected the values are larger towards the deeper nodes. The fourth chapter presents an population analysis based on five microsatellite loci to investigate whether or not the troglobitic species P. kronei displays population structuring in the caves of the PETAR (Parque Estadual Turístico do Alto Ribeira). The loci presented high polymorphism, the number of alleles raged from 9 in the locus PC58 to 34 in the locus PC87, the mean number of alleles per loci was 21,2. All loci showed private alleles PC17 and PC58 had 3 alleles and PC90 showed 22 private alleles distributed among all sampling locales. The global FST, estimative was significantly different from zero (FST = 0,1353) suggesting population.