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Embryonic development of the fire-eye-tetra Moenkhausia oligolepis (Characiformes: Characidae)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2021

Raquel Santos dos Santos
Affiliation:
Research Group of Studies on the Reproduction of Amazon fish (GERPA/LANEC), Faculdade de Biologia (FACBIO), University of South and Southern of Pará (Unifesspa), Marabá, Pará, Brazil Aquam Research Group, Department of Animal Science, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil
Jeane Rodrigues Rodrigues
Affiliation:
Research Group of Studies on the Reproduction of Amazon fish (GERPA/LANEC), Faculdade de Biologia (FACBIO), University of South and Southern of Pará (Unifesspa), Marabá, Pará, Brazil
Jhennifer Gomes Cordeiro
Affiliation:
Research Group of Studies on the Reproduction of Amazon fish (GERPA/LANEC), Faculdade de Biologia (FACBIO), University of South and Southern of Pará (Unifesspa), Marabá, Pará, Brazil
Hadda Tercya
Affiliation:
Research Group of Studies on the Reproduction of Amazon fish (GERPA/LANEC), Faculdade de Biologia (FACBIO), University of South and Southern of Pará (Unifesspa), Marabá, Pará, Brazil
Marissol Leite
Affiliation:
Research Group of Studies on the Reproduction of Amazon fish (GERPA/LANEC), Faculdade de Biologia (FACBIO), University of South and Southern of Pará (Unifesspa), Marabá, Pará, Brazil
Bruna Patrícia Dutra Costa
Affiliation:
Research Group of Studies on the Reproduction of Amazon fish (GERPA/LANEC), Faculdade de Biologia (FACBIO), University of South and Southern of Pará (Unifesspa), Marabá, Pará, Brazil PPG in Biodiversity and Biotechnology (BIONORTE)
Raphael da Silva Costa
Affiliation:
Laboratory of Fish Biotechnology, National Center for Research and Conservation of Continental Fish, Chico Mendes Institute of Biodiversity Conservation, São Paulo, Brazil
Caio Maximino
Affiliation:
Research Group of Studies on the Reproduction of Amazon fish (GERPA/LANEC), Faculdade de Biologia (FACBIO), University of South and Southern of Pará (Unifesspa), Marabá, Pará, Brazil PPG in Biodiversity and Biotechnology (BIONORTE)
Diógenes Henrique de Siqueira-Silva*
Affiliation:
Research Group of Studies on the Reproduction of Amazon fish (GERPA/LANEC), Faculdade de Biologia (FACBIO), University of South and Southern of Pará (Unifesspa), Marabá, Pará, Brazil PPG in Biodiversity and Biotechnology (BIONORTE)
*
Author for correspondence: Diógenes Henrique de Siqueira-Silva. Research Group of Studies on the Reproduction of Amazon fish (GERPA/LANEC), Faculdade de Biologia (FACBIO), University of South and Southern of Pará (Unifesspa), Marabá, Pará, Brazil. Tel: +55 94981135614. E-mail: diogenessilva@unifesspa.edu.br.

Summary

This study describes the embryonic development of Moenkhausia oligolepis in laboratory conditions. After fertilization, the embryos were collected every 10 min up to 2 h, then every 20 min up to 4 h, and afterwards every 30 min until hatching. The fertilized eggs of M. oligolepis measured approximately 0.85 ± 0.5 mm and had an adhesive surface. Embryonic development lasted 14 h at 25ºC through the zygote, cleavage, blastula, gastrula, neurula, and segmentation phases. Hatching occurred in embryos around the 30-somites stage. The present results contribute only the second description of embryonic development to a species from the Moenkhausia genus, being also the first for this species. Such data are of paramount importance considering the current conflicting state of this genus phylogenetic classification and may help taxonomic studies. Understanding the biology of a species that is easily managed in laboratory conditions and has an ornamental appeal may assist studies in its reproduction to both supply the aquarium market and help the species conservation in nature. Moreover, these data enable the use of M. oligolepis as a model species in biotechnological applications, such as the germ cell transplantation approach.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

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