TY - JOUR
T1 - Imaging scale surface topography of an endemic cyprinid fish, Garra sharq from the Arabian Peninsula
T2 - An integrated optical light and scanning electron microscopy approach
AU - Echreshavi, Sorour
AU - Al Jufaili, Saud M.
AU - Esmaeili, Hamid Reza
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank Environmental authority and Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Water Resources officials (Oman) for facilitating and providing fish collection permits. We acknowledge the central laboratory of Shiraz University for providing the SEM facility. We also thank A. H. Masoumi (Shiraz University) for his kind help in the fish collection in Oman. This research is a result of the scientific collaboration between Sultan Qaboos and Shiraz Universities. This project was funded by Sultan Qaboos University project number (IG/AGR/FISH/22/01, scale), and Shiraz University, Grant/Award Number: SU‐9531462.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The optical light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy techniques have proven to play a key and noteworthy role in the advancement of morphological studies in general, and in investigating fish scale morphology in particular. These techniques have illustrated several hidden architectural structures in scales that contribute effectively to fish identification and classification. The scale morphological and topological characters such as type, size, shape, lateral surface, focus position, circuli appearance, radii type, lepidonts, and posterior and anterior margin shapes were obtained using macro- and microscopic analysis in six body regions for three size classes of Garra sharq, a cyprinid endemic fish of the Arabian Peninsula. The general scale type in the studied G. sharq species was a basal elasmoid cycloid and a sectioned type. As a protective structure, the scales display several specific characteristics including firm attachment to the fish body, overlapping, and thin structure with a high surface area and high strength. These characteristics improve scale resistance to penetration, increase protection against mechanical injury and microbial infection, enhance scale flexibility, reduce fish weight (reduce friction drag), and increase scale transparency. The scales demonstrate plasticity in focus shape, size, and position in the six fish body parts and fish size groups. The examined scales displayed narrow or wide grooves (radii) in three types including primary, secondary, and tertiary present in all four scale fields (anterior, posterior, and laterals), thus a tetra-sectioned type that is almost specific to the genus Garra. This characteristic also increases scale flexibility. The rostral margin of scales was characterized by the presence of waved and striate types. The lepidont shape and size varied being blunt, flat, pointed, tiny, sharp, short, and long. Some of these scale characters and their morphologies could be used as an alternative tool for identification, classification, and phylogenetic interpretation among the different freshwater fish species and genera.
AB - The optical light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy techniques have proven to play a key and noteworthy role in the advancement of morphological studies in general, and in investigating fish scale morphology in particular. These techniques have illustrated several hidden architectural structures in scales that contribute effectively to fish identification and classification. The scale morphological and topological characters such as type, size, shape, lateral surface, focus position, circuli appearance, radii type, lepidonts, and posterior and anterior margin shapes were obtained using macro- and microscopic analysis in six body regions for three size classes of Garra sharq, a cyprinid endemic fish of the Arabian Peninsula. The general scale type in the studied G. sharq species was a basal elasmoid cycloid and a sectioned type. As a protective structure, the scales display several specific characteristics including firm attachment to the fish body, overlapping, and thin structure with a high surface area and high strength. These characteristics improve scale resistance to penetration, increase protection against mechanical injury and microbial infection, enhance scale flexibility, reduce fish weight (reduce friction drag), and increase scale transparency. The scales demonstrate plasticity in focus shape, size, and position in the six fish body parts and fish size groups. The examined scales displayed narrow or wide grooves (radii) in three types including primary, secondary, and tertiary present in all four scale fields (anterior, posterior, and laterals), thus a tetra-sectioned type that is almost specific to the genus Garra. This characteristic also increases scale flexibility. The rostral margin of scales was characterized by the presence of waved and striate types. The lepidont shape and size varied being blunt, flat, pointed, tiny, sharp, short, and long. Some of these scale characters and their morphologies could be used as an alternative tool for identification, classification, and phylogenetic interpretation among the different freshwater fish species and genera.
KW - classification
KW - Cyprinidae
KW - freshwater fishes
KW - phylogenetic interpretation
KW - scale ultrastructure
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U2 - 10.1111/azo.12449
DO - 10.1111/azo.12449
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85142652974
SN - 0001-7272
JO - Acta Zoologica
JF - Acta Zoologica
ER -