1. High rates of substitution of the native catfishClarias batrachusbyClarias gariepinusin India
- Author
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Rushidkumar N. Shinde, Anita Tiknaik, David S. Haymer, Amol Kalyankar, Tetsuzan Benny Ron, and Gulab Khedkar
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,High rate ,Clarias gariepinus ,Veterinary medicine ,Base Sequence ,Geography ,biology ,India ,Aquatic animal ,biology.organism_classification ,Clarias ,Aquatic organisms ,Fishery ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Genetics ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Catfishes ,Phylogeny ,Catfish - Abstract
The clariid catfish, Clarias batrachus commonly known as Magur, has declined drastically from natural habitats in India during the last decade. This fish is highly preferred fish by Indian consumers and has high market demand. As a result traders often substitute C. batrachus with a morphologically similar but supposedly banned exotic catfish, C. gariepinus, in India. This study uses rigorous morphological comparisons confirmed by DNA barcode analysis to examine the level of substitution of C. batracus by C. gariepinus in India. Our results indicate that up to 99% (in many cases) of the market samples sold as Magur or C. batrachus were in fact C. gariepinus.
- Published
- 2015
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