4.3 Article

Angelfishes, Paper Tigers, and the Devilish Taxonomy of the Centropyge flavissima Complex

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEREDITY
Volume 107, Issue 7, Pages 647-653

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jhered/esw062

Keywords

color variation; coral reef fish; hybridization; mitochondrial DNA; pygmy angelfish; taxonomy

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [OCE-0929031, OCE-1558852]
  2. Seaver Institute
  3. NOAA National Marine Sanctuaries Program (MOA) [2005-008/66882]
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  5. Directorate For Geosciences
  6. Division Of Ocean Sciences [1558852] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The pygmy angelfishes (genus Centropyge) provide numerous examples of discordance between color morphology, taxonomy, and evolutionary genetic lineages. This discordance is especially evident in the Centropyge flavissima complex, which includes three primary color morphs, three previously recognized species (C. flavissima, Centropyge eibli, and Centropyge vrolikii) and three distinct mitochondrial (mtDNA) lineages that do not align with species designations. Our previous research showed that the putative C. flavissima arose independently in the Indian and Pacific Oceans, and the three mtDNA lineages align with geography rather than species assignments. Here, we add 157 specimens to the previous dataset of 291 specimens, spread across a greater geographic range, to pinpoint the distribution of mtDNA lineages and color morphs. We found that the mtDNA lineages show remarkably strong geographic boundaries corresponding to the Indian Ocean, Central-West Pacific, and Central-South Pacific. We also test the validity of the Black Tiger Centropyge in the C. flavissima species complex, a taxonomic oddity that is restricted to shoals and atolls off the coast of northwestern Australia, and the newly named Centropyge cocosensis assigned to the C. flavissima lineage in the Indian Ocean. We conclude that the Black Tiger Centropyge is not a valid species but rather an intermediate between sympatric color morphs that correspond to the putative species C. eibli and C. vrolikii. Our greater sampling efforts also do not support the genetic distinctiveness of C. cocosensis given shared mtDNA haplotypes with the sympatric C. eibli and C. vrolikii, but instead we find conflicting lines of evidence concerning the taxonomy of this group. We urge caution and taxonomic restraint until the true nature of this species complex can be revealed.

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