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. 2025 Aug 25:1249:303-315.
doi: 10.3897/zookeys.1249.154110. eCollection 2025.

A new Pseudophoxinus species (Teleostei, Cypriniformes, Leuciscidae) from the upper Jordan River basin (Israel) with comments on the status of a few other congeneric species

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A new Pseudophoxinus species (Teleostei, Cypriniformes, Leuciscidae) from the upper Jordan River basin (Israel) with comments on the status of a few other congeneric species

Menachem Goren et al. Zookeys. .

Abstract

A taxonomic reassessment of Pseudophoxinus populations in the upper Jordan River basin has revealed that specimens previously identified as Pseudophoxinus kervillei actually represent an undescribed species. In addition, earlier taxonomic revisions have shown that P. kervillei is a junior synonym of P. libani and should no longer be regarded as a valid species. In this study, we formally describe the newly recognized species as Pseudophoxinus galilaeus sp. nov. Pseudophoxinus galilaeus sp. nov. is characterized by 39-44 scales along the mid-lateral row, 13-17 pored lateral line scales, and 20-23 predorsal scales. It has 4-5 gill rakers on the lower arch of the first gill, with two being notably short. The species possesses 33-34 vertebrae; its dorsal fin originates at vertebrae 12 or 13, and its anal fin commonly originates at vertebra 19, occasionally extending to vertebra 20 or 21. Pseudophoxinus galilaeus sp. nov. inhabits ponds, lakes, and rivers with slow to moderate currents. A unique DNA barcoding signature (mtDNA COI) revealed that it differs from any other previously bar-coded Pseudophoxinus species. In phylogenetic analyses, it clustered with the Pseudophoxinus species from neighboring countries in the Levant region, suggesting a common ancestor for these species. This analysis shows that sequences of P. kervillei from Turkey differ from P. libani from Lebanon and Syria. Further morphological examination is needed to determine the status of the species.

Keywords: COI; DNA barcoding; freshwater fish; integrated taxonomy; minnows; new species; phylogenetic analysis.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Pseudophoxinus galilaeus sp. nov. An aquarium picture (1968, photo A. Subb).
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Holotype of Pseudophoxinus galilaeus sp. nov. SMNHTAU-P.17856 (Photo: O. Rittner.)
Figure 3.
Figure 3.
Profile aspect of the head of P. galilaeus. (Photo: O. Rittner).
Figure 4.
Figure 4.
Ventral aspect of the head of P. galilaeus. (Photo: O. Rittner).
Figure 5.
Figure 5.
The phylogenetic relationships among Pseudophoxinus species from Israel and neighboring water systems. The maximum likelihood tree was reconstructed in IQtree2 using 48 sequences with 545 nucleotide sites (See Suppl. material 2 for sequence details).

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