DISTRIBUTION AND ABUNDANCE OF THE ENDANGERED KILLIFISH FUNDULUS LIMA, AND ITS INTERACTION WITH EXOTIC FISHES IN OASES OF CENTRAL BAJA CALIFORNIA, MEXICO
- G. Ruiz-Campos, Faustino Camarena-Rosales, S. Contreras-Balderas, C. A. Reyes-Valdez, J. De La Cruz‐Agüero, Elias Torres-Balcazar
- Environmental Science
- 1 December 2006
The status of Baja California killifish should be changed from threatened to endangered to reflect continued reductions in distribution as result of proliferation of nonnative fishes, particularly redbelly tilapia.
Morphometric variation of wild trout populations from northwestern Mexico (Pisces: Salmonidae)
- G. Ruiz-Campos, Faustino Camarena-Rosales, A. Varela‐Romero, Sergio Sánchez-González, J. Rosa-Vélez
- BiologyReviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries
- 31 December 2003
Morphometric variation of 17 wild troutpopulations of the genus Oncorhynchusfrom northwestern Mexico was analyzed.We used 25 standardized morphometric characters following a box truss protocol. In…
First steps towards the identification of evolutionarily significant units in Mexican native trout: An assessment of microsatellite variation
- F. J. García-De León, C. Dillman, R. Mayden
- Biology, Environmental ScienceEnvironmental Biology of Fishes
- 15 May 2020
The results reject the old hypothesis that many of the trout in Mexico are introduced or translocated hatchery-reared rainbow trout and strongly support the new hypothesis of distinct genetic populations and lineages in the northwest of Mexico.
Genetic monitoring of the Mexican four-eyed octopus Octopus maya population: New insights and perspectives for the fishery management
- Ó. Juárez, Luis Enríquez, C. Rosas
- Environmental ScienceFisheries Research
- 1 October 2018
Genetic isolation and evolutionary history of oases populations of the Baja California killifish, Fundulus lima
- G. Bernardi, G. Ruiz-Campos, Faustino Camarena-Rosales
- BiologyConservation Genetics
- 20 April 2007
Each oasis is genetically distinct, yet there is no evidence of a␣marked genetic bottleneck in any populations (Haplotype diversity between 0.5 and 0.8), so future relocation plans will need to be done cautiously to preserve the genetic identity of the original populations.
Mitochondrial haplotype variation in wild trout populations (Teleostei: Salmonidae) from northwestern Mexico
- Faustino Camarena-Rosales, G. Ruiz-Campos, F. J. García de León
- BiologyReviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries
- 1 February 2008
Distributions of native haplotypes broadly overlap the distribution of non-native hatchery rainbow trout reflecting the historical management of introductions of exotic rainbow trout and the artificial transference of these trout among basins.
Assessing population-level morphometric variation of the Mountain Mullet Agonostomus monticola (Teleostei: Mugilidae) across its Middle American distribution
- Bertha P. Díaz-Murillo, G. Ruiz-Campos, K. Piller, Caleb D. McMahan, F. J. García‐de‐León, Faustino Camarena-Rosales
- Environmental Science
- 21 December 2017
The authors' results provide morphological evidence for considering Agonostomus monticola as a complex of evolutionary entities, represented by two forms in the Pacific Ocean and another in the Atlantic Ocean.
Complete mitochondrial genome of Ictalurus pricei (Teleostei: Ictaluridae) and evidence of a cryptic Ictalurus species in Northwest Mexico
- C. A. Ballesteros‐Córdova, Melissa Castañeda-Rivera, A. Varela‐Romero
- BiologyMitochondrial DNA. Part A, DNA mapping…
- 1 November 2016
The molecular phylogeny represents a working hypothesis supporting information on the evolutionary relationships of the Ictalurus species from Western Mexico and Western USA.
Population morphometric variation of the endemic freshwater killifish, Fundulus lima (Teleostei: Fundulidae), and its coastal relative F. parvipinnis from the Baja California Peninsula, Mexico
- C. A. Reyes-Valdez, G. Ruiz-Campos, Faustino Camarena-Rosales, J. L. Castro-Aguirre, G. Bernardi
- BiologyReviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries
- 1 September 2011
This study suggests the presence of five evolutionary units (three freshwater and two coastal) for the genus Fundulus in the Baja California peninsula.
Biometric and Allozymic Characterization of Three Coastal and Inland Killifish Populations (Pisces: Fundulidae) from the Peninsula of Baja California, Mexico
- Faustino Camarena-Rosales, J. Rosa-Vélez, G. Ruiz-Campos, F. Corrêa
- Biology
- 1 April 2001
The number of scales in the lateral series successfully split the species, while the caudal length/standard length ratio did so between subspecies, and two diagnostic loci segregated private alleles in each taxon.
...
...