Abstract:
Systomus sarana (Pisces: Cyprinidae) is described from India and is believed to be
widely distributed in the South Asian region including Sri Lanka. The taxonomic
status of the species identified previously as S. sarana in Sri Lanka is ambiguous.
There are two available names for this fish in Sri Lanka, i.e. Systomus spilurus and
Systomus timbiri yet the affirmative use of these two names require validation
through phylogenetic evidence. No previous molecular studies had been carried
out for this species, therefore, the present study aimed to find molecular evidence
through DNA barcoding to reveal Systomus diversity in Sri Lanka. Partial
mitochondrial COI gene sequences were analysed from S. sarana like fishes from
several geographic locations, and a sequence comparison was carried out to
determine if the Sri Lankan specimens are identical to or different from Indian
specimens. BLAST search did not yield any GenBank sequence with 100%
similarity to the submitted Sri Lankan sequences suggesting that the Sri Lankan
specimens cannot be similar to the Indian S. sarana. According to the derived
molecular phylogenetic tree, the specimens from Sri Lanka were separated from
Indian S. sarana with more than 98% bootstrap support and the Kimura 2-
parameter (K2p) divergence levels ranging from 2.9% to 4.6% between them. This
indicates that the species available in Sri Lanka is clearly a separate lineage from
S. sarana (India). Furthermore, Sri Lankan specimens were clustered in to two
clades with K2p ranging 2% - 2.2% divergence. The first clade (A) represented the
specimens from Walawe River, Nilwala River, Kirindi Oya and Menik River,
while the second clade (B) consisted of Kalu River, Kelani River and Gin River.
Considering the type locality of S. timbiri (Walawe River), it can be suggested that
the Clade A represents S. timbiri. Clade B is proposed to be the other species S.
spilurus. The results of this study give molecular evidence for revalidating the
names of S. spilurus and S. timbiri for the species that was long misnamed as S.
sarana. Morphological comparison among relevant type specimens will be further
needed to confirm this phylogenetic identification.