Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Angelfish, really?

How some tropical fish are gettin’ squiggly with it

- By Sabrina Imbler The New York Times

When American painter Bob Ross said, “There are no mistakes, only happy accidents,” he was referring to paint on a canvas.

But his mantra is just as true for fish from coral reefs, where the eggs of one species of fish and the sperm from another can sometimes combine to produce hybrid offspring with colors even more startling than that of their parents. Think of them as the happy little shrubs of speciation.

Take, for example, the multibarre­d angelfish ( Paracentro­pyge

multifasci­ata), which boasts blackandwh­ite stripes like window blinds, and the purple masked angelfish ( Paracentro­pyge venusta), which resembles a lemon drop with a brilliant purplish- blue backside. When the two fish breed, they produce a blue- and- yellow hybrid swirled with white, almost like a slice of babka.

When Yi- Kai Tea, a graduate student at the University of Sydney and the Australian Museum Research Institute, first saw this squiggly angelfish, he suspected it was a hybrid. Although coral reefs may appear to be a panoply of bright hues, many coral reef fish have colorful patterns as distinct as stamps, making hybrids easy to spot.

As Mr. Tea hunted around for other examples of the apparent hybrid, he came up with the idea for a comprehens­ive survey of all known, naturally occurring marine angelfish hybrids, which he and his colleagues describe in a paper published this month in

Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B.

To find subjects, the researcher­s pored through photograph­s, old studies and museum archives. Mr. Tea even asked to see someone’s pet fish. After comparing the mitochondr­ial DNA of 37 hybrids to that of their parents’ species, the team found that 48% of marine angelfishe­s can hybridize, more than any other group of coral reef fish. This data topples the previous record- holders, butterflyf­ishes, a family in which more than a third of species are capable of producing hybrids.

“Hybridizat­ion in reef fishes has been a conundrum for some time,” said Hugo Harrison, a molecular ecologist at James Cook University in Australia who was not affiliated with the paper.

The hybrid process was historical­ly dismissed as a rare phenomenon among coral reef fish, but a growing body of research in the past few decades has uncovered a surprising abundance of hybrids, according to a 2015 paper in Current Zoology.

In the case of butterflyf­ish, most hybrids happen in the narrow edges where two population­s meet. If a butterflyf­ish strays too far from its own kind, it may have trouble finding a mate of its own species.

“So they’ll mate with someone that looks the most like them,” said Luiz Rocha, curator of fishes at the California Academy of Sciences, who provided examples of hybrids for the paper.

But the new study found that

the majority of angelfish hybrids occur between species that live on the same reefs. At first glance, sympatric hybridizat­ion makes no evolutiona­ry sense and even poses a threat to species diversity. If a fish of one species could repeatedly produce viable offspring with another species living on the same reef, the two species could erode into one.

One possible explanatio­n is that angelfish reject monogamy. Unlike butterflyf­ish, which mate for life, angelfish live in harems where multiple females mate with a single male.

“When the male identifies one female in his harem, they will rise up in the water column and release their sperm and eggs,” Mr. Tea said.

Once adrift, an egg is fair game for fertilizat­ion by a sperm from any other species. Although this can technicall­y happen for all reef fishes, the chances of fluke fertilizat­ion are much higher with several angelfish species squatting on the same reef.

“In the ocean, accidents happen,” Mr. Rocha said.

One of the paper’s most surprising findings is that angelfishe­s can produce hybrid offspring with species possessing as much as 11% difference in mitochondr­ial DNA.

“This is extremely remarkable,” Mr. Tea said, noting that this evolutiona­ry distance was equivalent of a liger ( lion and tiger).

Reef fish rarely hybridize across more than 6% difference, Mr. Tea added.

“What’s fascinatin­g about this study is that hybrids are so common, not just geographic­ally but also among species lineages.” Mr. Harrison said.

Although the paper reveals a surprising abundance of angelfish hybrids, the mechanism itself — how and why hybrids form — remains puzzling, the researcher­s write. One eccentrici­ty, for example, is the fact that the researcher­s could not find a single example of a hybrid regal angelfish, a tropical fish that swims almost anywhere there is a tropical ocean.

The 11% hybrid in the new paper is a mix between the Emperor angelfish ( Pomacanthu­s imperator) and the bluering angelfish ( P. annularis).

The juvenile emperor resembles tree rings of porcelain, concentric blue and white circles rippling out from its tail, while the juvenile bluering sports chevroned blue and white stripes. In their hybrid offspring, amazingly enough, these circles and stripes transmogri­fy into a maze that might be found in a child’s puzzle book. If only the secrets of hybridizat­ion were as easy to solve.

 ?? Yi- Kai Tea photos via The New York Times ?? Various species of angelfish and their hybridized offspring in the right column. Row A: Griffis, left, and goldspotte­d angelfish; Row B: red stripe and lemonpeel angelfish; Row C: flame and rusty angelfish; Row D: swallowtai­l and bellus angelfish.
Yi- Kai Tea photos via The New York Times Various species of angelfish and their hybridized offspring in the right column. Row A: Griffis, left, and goldspotte­d angelfish; Row B: red stripe and lemonpeel angelfish; Row C: flame and rusty angelfish; Row D: swallowtai­l and bellus angelfish.
 ??  ?? A juvenile emperor hybrid that is a cross between the emperor angelfish and the bluering angelfish. On occasion, different species of angelfish produce hybrid offspring even more colorful than the parents.
A juvenile emperor hybrid that is a cross between the emperor angelfish and the bluering angelfish. On occasion, different species of angelfish produce hybrid offspring even more colorful than the parents.
 ?? Yi- Kai Tea via The New York Times ?? A hybrid Venusta multifasci­ata, a cross between a multibarre­d angelfish and a purple masked angelfish.
Yi- Kai Tea via The New York Times A hybrid Venusta multifasci­ata, a cross between a multibarre­d angelfish and a purple masked angelfish.

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