Morphomeristic study of sympatric Barbus species from a man-made reservoir in upland Kenya
Abstract
Abstract
The small Barbus are a widely distributed group of
freshwater fishes in Africa whose taxonomy is yet to be
resolved. This study used morphomeristic analysis of
characters to distinguish and describe sympatric Barbus
species of Chepkoilel reservoir in upland Kenya. A total of
51 fish were collected in November 2007, and 21 morphometric
measurements and nine meristic counts were
determined on each specimen. Data were entered in an
Excel spreadsheet and exported to the PAST programme
for analysis using principal component analysis (PCA).
The significance of important characters identified in the
PCA was determined using nonparametric Mann–Whitney
U tests at a = 0.05. The specimens belonged to three
species: Barbus kertenii, B. paludinosus and B. jacksonii. A
PCA on their morphometric characters revealed no clear
separation of polygons suggesting the species had similar
body morphometry. However, a PCA on raw meristics
showed complete separation of B. paludinosus and
B. jacksonii on the first principal component, which was
defined mostly by the number of lateral line scales,
branched dorsal rays, branched pectoral rays and branched
ventral rays. Our study provides more characters
useful for distinguishing the Barbus species in addition to
those stated in their respective original species descriptions.