STUDIES OF THE CLADOCERA (CRUSTACEA: BRANCHIOPODA) OF ETHIOPIA: CURRENT STATE AND FURTHER PERSPECTIVES

  • Anna N. Neretina
  • Wondie Zelalem
  • Alexey A. Kotov
Keywords: Africa, Biodiversity, Cladocera, Morphology, Taxonomy.

Abstract

The cladoceran fauna of Ethiopia (East Africa) was analyzed based on original sampling data, obtained during activity of the Joint Ethio-Russian Biological Expedition. In total, we found 63 species of Cladocera in Ethiopian water bodies: 26 species of Chydoridae, 18 species of Daphniidae, 6 of Moinidae, 5 of Macrothricidae, 5 of Sididae, 2 of Ilyocryptidae and 1 of Bosminidae. The highest cladoceran diversity (39 taxa) was marked in the mountainous Lake Tana; some of them are typical only for this lake. Diverse lakes, rivers and temporary pools have lower species diversity (24 taxa in total). Water bodies of Bale Mountains are characterized by significantly low cladoceran diversity and high proportion of endemic taxa which are still waiting for detailed description. In general, Ethiopia is inhabited by typical tropical cladocerans with broad distribution ranges, cosmopolitan, circumtropical and Afrotropical-Palearctic species, as well as endemic taxa for Africa and Ethiopian high mountains regions. A cladoceran collection created as a result of our work will be a base for future taxonomic and ecological studies in Ethiopia.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

African Economic Outlook (2016). Sustainable Cities and Structural Transformation. OECD Publishing, Paris.
Bekker, E.I., Karabanov, D.P., Galimov, Y.G. and Kotov, A.A. (2016). DNA barcoding reveals high cryptic diversity in the North Eurasian Moina species (Crustacea: Cladocera). PloS One 11(8): e0161737.
Billi, P. (ed.) (2015). Landscapes and Landforms of Ethiopia. Springer, Dordrecht.
Frey, D.G. (1987). The taxonomy and biogeography of the Cladocera. Hydrobiologia 145: 5–7.
Gurney, R. (1904). On a small collection of a freshwater Entomostraca from South Africa. Proc. Gen. Meetings Sci. Business Zool. Soc. Lond. 2: 298–301.
Kloos, H. and Legesse, W. (2010). Water Resources Management in Ethiopia: Implications for the Nile basin. Cambria Press, Amherst, New York.
Korovchinsky, N.M. (1996). How many species of Cladocera are there? Hydrobiologia 321 (3): 191–204.
Korovchinsky, N.M. (2006). The Cladocera (Crustacea: Branchiopoda) as a relict group. Zool. J. Linn. Soc. 147: 109–124.
Kotov, A.A. (2013). Morphology and phylogeny of Anomopoda (Crustacea: Cladocera). KMK, Moscow. [In Russian with English abstract].
More inside the PDF
Published
2017-11-14