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Fırat Havzası (Türkiye)’nda Yerleşmiş Yabancı Tür Xiphophorus hellerii’nin Üremesi

Year 2025, Volume: 53 Issue: 5, 15 - 22, 26.12.2025
https://doi.org/10.15671/hjbc.1717036

Abstract

Project Number

DÜBAP Project number: 2024.05.01.1469

References

  • F. Teletchea, Domestication level of the most popular aquarium fish species: Is the aquarium trade dependent on wild populations? Cybium, 40 (2016) 21–29.
  • E. K. Balon, Origin and domestication of the wild carp, Cyprinus carpio: From Roman gourmets to the swimming flowers. Aquaculture, 129 (1995) 3–48.
  • K. Balon, About the oldest domesticates among fishes. J. Fish Biol., 65 (2004) 1–27.
  • S. De Kock, B. Gomelsky, Japanese Ornamental Koi Carp: Origin, Variation and Genetics, (2015) 27–53.
  • P.E. Hulme, Trade, transport and trouble: managing invasive species pathways in an era of globalization. J. Appl. Ecol., 46 (2009) 10–18.
  • A. L. Strecker, P. M. Campbell, J. D. Olden, The Aquarium Trade as an Invasion Pathway in the Pacific Northwest. Fisheries, 36(2)(2011) 74–85.
  • I. C. Duggan, C. A. M. Rixon, H. J. MacIsaac, Popularity and propagule pressure: determinants of introduction and establishment of aquarium fish. Biol. Invasions, 8(2006) 377–382.
  • H. R. Esmaeli, A. Teimori, F. Owfi, K. Abbasi, B. W. Coad, Alien and invasive freshwater fish species in Iran: Diversity, environmental impacts and management. Iran. J. Ichthyol., 1(2) (2014) 61–72.
  • A. L. B.Magalhães, C. M. Jakobi, Colorful invasion in permissive Neotropical ecosystems: establishment of ornamental non-native poeciliids of the genera Poecilia/Xiphophorus (Cyprinodontiformes: Poeciliidae) and management alternatives. Neotrop. Ichthyol., 15(1) (2017) e160094.
  • E. Gertzen, O. Familiar, B. Leung, Quantifying invasion pathways: Fish introductions from the aquarium trade. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci., 65(7)(2008) 1265–1273.
  • C. S. Kolar, D. M. Lodge, Ecological predictions and risk assessment for alien fishes in North America. Science, 298 (5596) (2002) 1233–1236.
  • D. Simberloff, J. L. Martin, P. Genovesi, V. Maris, D. A. Wardle, J. Aronson, F. Courchamp, B. Galil, E. Garcia-Berthou, M. Pascal, P. Pysˇek., R. Sousa, E. Tabacchi, M. Vila, Impacts of biological invasions: what's what and the way forward. Trends Ecol. Evol., 28(1)(2013) 58–66.
  • Ö. Emiroğlu, F. G. Ekmekçi, S. Aksu, S. Başkurt, M. A. Atalay, A. S. Tarkan, Introduction and establishment of tropical ornamental fish, Pterygoplichthys spp. (Actinopterygii: Siluriformes: Loricariidae) in hot springs: aquarium trade as a potential risk for biodiversity in Turkey. Acta Ichthyol. Piscat., 46(4)(2016) 351–356.
  • Ö. Emiroğlu, M. A. Atalay, F. G. Ekmekçi, S. Aksu, S. Başkurt, E. Keskin, E. M. Ünal, B. Yoğurtçuoğlu, A. S. Tarkan, One of the World's Worst Invasive Species, Clarias batrachus (Actinopterygii: Siluriformes: Clariidae), Has Arrived and Established a Population in Turkey. Acta Ichthyol. Piscat., 50(4)(2020) 391–400.
  • G. Türkmen, First record of the Guppy (Poecilia reticulata Peters, 1859) in inland waters of Turkey. Ege Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 36(4) (2019) 397–400.
  • Ş. G. Kırankaya, F. G. Ekmekci, First Record of a Feral population of Exotic Green Swordtail (Xiphophorus hellerii) with an Additional Record of Guppy (Poecilia reticulata) in Turkish freshwaters. Hacettepe J. Biol. & Chem., 49(4) (2021) 433–441.
  • S. Aksu, S. Başkurt, Ö. Emiroğlu, A. S. Tarkan, Establishment and range expansion of non-native fish species facilitated by hot springs: The case study from the Upper Sakarya Basin (NW, Turkey). Oceanol. Hydrobiol. St., 50(3) 2021.
  • M. Özuluğ, N. Meriç, J. Freyhof, The distribution of Carassius gibelio (Bloch, 1782) (Teleostei: Cyprinidae) in Thrace (Turkey). Zool. Middle East, 31 (2014), 63–66.
  • A. İlhan, S. Balık, H. M. Sarı, M. R. Ustaoğlu, Batı ve Orta Anadolu, Güney Marmara, Trakya ve Batı Karadeniz bölgeleri içsularındaki Carassius (Cyprinidae, Pisces) Türleri ve Dağılımları. E. Ü. Su Ürünleri Dergisi, 22(3-4) (2005) 343–346.
  • M. Koyun, F. N. Altınel, Metazoan Parasites of Bleak (Alburnus alburnus), Crucian Carp (Carassius carassius) and Golden Carp (Carassius auratus) in Enne Dam Lake, Turkey. International Journal of Zoological Research, 3(2) (2007) 94–100.
  • S. Uğurlu, N. Polat, Samsun ili tatlısu kaynaklarında yaşayan egzotik balık türleri. Journal of Fisheries Sciences.com, 1(3) (2007) , 139–151.
  • Ö. Emiroğlu, Alien fish species in upper Sakarya River and their distribution. Afr. J. Biotechnol., 10(2011) (73), 16674–16681.
  • H. Aydın, Ö. Gaygusuz, A. S. Tarkan, N. Top, Ö. Emiroğlu, Ç. Gürsoy Gaygusuz, Invasion of freshwater bodies in the Marmara region (northwestern Turkey) by non-native gibel carp, Carassius gibelio (Bloch, 1782). Turk. J. Zool., 35(6) (2011) 829–836.
  • J. Freyhof, B. Yoğurtçuoğlu, A. Jouladeh-Roudbar, C. Kaya, Handbook of Freshwater Fishes of West Asia. De Gruyter, Berlin, Germany, 2025.
  • A. S. Tarkan, A story of piranha in Sapanca Lake. Av Doğa, 41 (2006) 75–77.
  • B. Yoğurtçuoğlu, F. G. Ekmekçi, First record of the giant pangasius, Pangasius sanitwongsei (Actinopterygii: Siluriformes: Pangasiidae), from central Anatolia, Turkey. Acta Ichthyol. Piscat., 48(3) (2018) 241–244.
  • L. Nico, P. Fuller, M. Neilson, Xiphophorus hellerii Heckel, 1848: U.S. Geological Survey, Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database, Gainesville, FL, 2025.
  • M. Maddern, H. S. Gill, D. L. Morgan, Biology and invasive potential of the introduced swordtail Xiphophorus hellerii Heckel (Poeciliidae) in Western Australia. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems, 21 (2011) 282–291.
  • C. Perdikaris, N. Koutsikos, L. Vardakas, D. Kommatas, P. Simonovic, I. Paschos, V. Detsis, L. Vilizzi, G. H. Copp, Risk screening of non-native, translocated and traded aquarium freshwater fishes in Greece using Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit. Fisheries Manag. Ecol., 23 (2016) 32–43.
  • R. Froese, D. Pauly (Eds.), FishBase. World Wide Web electronic publication. www.fishbase.org, version (04/2025).
  • B. Yogurtcuoglu, F.G. Ekmekci, Variation in Life History and Feeding Ecology of the Invasive Eastern Mosquitofish, Gambusia holbrooki Girard, 1859 (Poeciliidae), in a Groundwater-dependent Wetland in Turkey, Acta Zool. Bulgar., Suppl. 9 (2017) 117-130.
  • J. L. Haynes, Standardized classification of Poeciliid development for life history studies. Copeia,( 1995) 147–154.
  • J.H. Zar, Biostatistical analysis, 3rd edn., Prentice-Hall, New Jersey, USA, 1996.
  • M. Maddern, Xiphophorus hellerii, In: CABI Compendium, CAB International, Wallingford, UK, https://www.cabidigitallibrary.org/doi/full/10.1079/cabicompendium.59751, (2009).
  • D.A. Milton, A.H. Arthington, Reproductive biology of Gambusia affinis holbrooki Baird & Girard, Xiphophorus hellerii (Gunther) and X. maculatus (Heckel) (Pisces: Poeciliidae) in Queensland, Australia, J. Fish Biol., 23 (1983) 23-41.
  • Q.M. Tuckett, J.L. Ritch, K.M. Lawson, J.E. Hill, Landscape-scale survey of non-native fishes near ornamental aquaculture facilities in Florida, USA, Biol. Invasions, 19 (2017) 223-237.
  • A.E. Deacon, I.W. Ramnarine, A.E. Magurran, How reproductive ecology contributes to the spread of a globally invasive fish, PLoS One, 6(9) (2011) e24416.
  • I.J. De Moor, M.N. Bruton (Compilers), Atlas of alien and translocated indigenous aquatic animals in southern Africa, National Scientific Programmes Unit: CSIR, SANSP Report 144, (1988), pp. 317.
  • K.D. Kallman, R.B. Walter, D.C. Morizot, S. Kazianis, Two new species of Xiphophorus (Poeciliidae) from the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico, with a discussion of the distribution of the X. clemenciae clade, Am. Mus. Novit., 3441 (2004) 1-34.
  • B. Yoğurtçuoğlu, Simultaneous reproduction of two killifish congeners in the highly alkaline Lake Salda (Turkey), Marine and Freshwater Research, 70 (2019) 1633–1642
  • D. Innal, F. Erkakan, Effects of exotic and translocated fish species in the inland waters of Turkey, Rev. Fish Biol. Fisher., 16 (2006) 39-50.
  • I.C. Duggan, The freshwater aquarium trade as a vector for incidental invertebrate fauna, Biol. Invasions, 12 (2010) 3757-3770.
  • R.J. McKay, Introductions of exotic fishes in Australia, In: W.R. Courtenay, J.R. Stauffer (Eds.), Distribution, Biology and Management of Exotic Fishes, John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, USA,1984.
  • A.H. Arthington, Diet of Gambusia affinis holbrooki, Xiphophorus hellerii, X. maculatus and Poecilia reticulata (Pisces: Poeciliidae) in streams of southeastern Queensland, Australia, Asian Fisheries Science, 2 (1989) 193-212.
  • R.A. Englund, The impacts of introduced poeciliid fish and Odonata on the endemic megalagrion (Odonata) damselflies of Oahu Island, Hawaii, Journal of Insect Conservation, 3 (1999) 225-243.
  • D. Dudgeon, R. Corlett, Hills and Streams: An Ecology of Hong Kong, Hong Kong University Press, Hong Kong , 1994.
  • M. Goren, B.S. Galil, A review of changes in the fish assemblages of Levantine inland and marine ecosystems following the introduction of non-native fishes, J. Appl. Ichthyol., 21 (2005) 364-370.
  • W.R. Courtenay, C.R. Robins, R.M. Bailey, J.E. Deacon, Records of exotic fishes from Idaho and Wyoming, Great Basin Naturalist, 47 (1988) 523-526.

Reproduction of Established Non-native Xiphophorus hellerii in the Euphrates Drainage, Türkiye

Year 2025, Volume: 53 Issue: 5, 15 - 22, 26.12.2025
https://doi.org/10.15671/hjbc.1717036

Abstract

The green swordtail (Xiphophorus hellerii) is a live-bearing poeciliid and a widely traded ornamental fish species. Although native to North and Central America, feral populations have been reported in many countries. In Türkiye, the first established population was recorded in 2021 in a thermal spring near the upper Euphrates Drainage. This study investigated the establishment and reproductive potential of this feral population. A total of 551 individuals (374 females, 177 males) were collected during seasonal surveys in May 2024 and February 2025. The male-to-female ratio was 1:2.11, indicating female dominance. Female standard lengths ranged from 13.45 to 57.51 mm, and males from 25.54 to 58.10 mm. The smallest reproductive female and male measured 26.04 mm and 25.54 mm, respectively. Gravid females were observed in all seasonal samples, with mean fecundity peaking in summer (43.9 ± 21.2). These findings suggest high reproductive potential and successful establishment of the population. Given the risk of range expansion, continued ecological monitoring is recommended to support effective management strategies.

Ethical Statement

The study was approved by Duzce University, Animal Experiments Local Ethics Committee (No: 2024/03/08).

Supporting Institution

Düzce University

Project Number

DÜBAP Project number: 2024.05.01.1469

Thanks

The study was funded by Düzce University Scientific Research Projects Coordination under the project: DÜBAP 2024.05.01.1469 “Investigation of Biological Properties of Wild Populations of Aquarium Fish Green Swordtail (Xiphophorus hellerii) and Guppy (Poecilia reticulata)”

References

  • F. Teletchea, Domestication level of the most popular aquarium fish species: Is the aquarium trade dependent on wild populations? Cybium, 40 (2016) 21–29.
  • E. K. Balon, Origin and domestication of the wild carp, Cyprinus carpio: From Roman gourmets to the swimming flowers. Aquaculture, 129 (1995) 3–48.
  • K. Balon, About the oldest domesticates among fishes. J. Fish Biol., 65 (2004) 1–27.
  • S. De Kock, B. Gomelsky, Japanese Ornamental Koi Carp: Origin, Variation and Genetics, (2015) 27–53.
  • P.E. Hulme, Trade, transport and trouble: managing invasive species pathways in an era of globalization. J. Appl. Ecol., 46 (2009) 10–18.
  • A. L. Strecker, P. M. Campbell, J. D. Olden, The Aquarium Trade as an Invasion Pathway in the Pacific Northwest. Fisheries, 36(2)(2011) 74–85.
  • I. C. Duggan, C. A. M. Rixon, H. J. MacIsaac, Popularity and propagule pressure: determinants of introduction and establishment of aquarium fish. Biol. Invasions, 8(2006) 377–382.
  • H. R. Esmaeli, A. Teimori, F. Owfi, K. Abbasi, B. W. Coad, Alien and invasive freshwater fish species in Iran: Diversity, environmental impacts and management. Iran. J. Ichthyol., 1(2) (2014) 61–72.
  • A. L. B.Magalhães, C. M. Jakobi, Colorful invasion in permissive Neotropical ecosystems: establishment of ornamental non-native poeciliids of the genera Poecilia/Xiphophorus (Cyprinodontiformes: Poeciliidae) and management alternatives. Neotrop. Ichthyol., 15(1) (2017) e160094.
  • E. Gertzen, O. Familiar, B. Leung, Quantifying invasion pathways: Fish introductions from the aquarium trade. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci., 65(7)(2008) 1265–1273.
  • C. S. Kolar, D. M. Lodge, Ecological predictions and risk assessment for alien fishes in North America. Science, 298 (5596) (2002) 1233–1236.
  • D. Simberloff, J. L. Martin, P. Genovesi, V. Maris, D. A. Wardle, J. Aronson, F. Courchamp, B. Galil, E. Garcia-Berthou, M. Pascal, P. Pysˇek., R. Sousa, E. Tabacchi, M. Vila, Impacts of biological invasions: what's what and the way forward. Trends Ecol. Evol., 28(1)(2013) 58–66.
  • Ö. Emiroğlu, F. G. Ekmekçi, S. Aksu, S. Başkurt, M. A. Atalay, A. S. Tarkan, Introduction and establishment of tropical ornamental fish, Pterygoplichthys spp. (Actinopterygii: Siluriformes: Loricariidae) in hot springs: aquarium trade as a potential risk for biodiversity in Turkey. Acta Ichthyol. Piscat., 46(4)(2016) 351–356.
  • Ö. Emiroğlu, M. A. Atalay, F. G. Ekmekçi, S. Aksu, S. Başkurt, E. Keskin, E. M. Ünal, B. Yoğurtçuoğlu, A. S. Tarkan, One of the World's Worst Invasive Species, Clarias batrachus (Actinopterygii: Siluriformes: Clariidae), Has Arrived and Established a Population in Turkey. Acta Ichthyol. Piscat., 50(4)(2020) 391–400.
  • G. Türkmen, First record of the Guppy (Poecilia reticulata Peters, 1859) in inland waters of Turkey. Ege Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 36(4) (2019) 397–400.
  • Ş. G. Kırankaya, F. G. Ekmekci, First Record of a Feral population of Exotic Green Swordtail (Xiphophorus hellerii) with an Additional Record of Guppy (Poecilia reticulata) in Turkish freshwaters. Hacettepe J. Biol. & Chem., 49(4) (2021) 433–441.
  • S. Aksu, S. Başkurt, Ö. Emiroğlu, A. S. Tarkan, Establishment and range expansion of non-native fish species facilitated by hot springs: The case study from the Upper Sakarya Basin (NW, Turkey). Oceanol. Hydrobiol. St., 50(3) 2021.
  • M. Özuluğ, N. Meriç, J. Freyhof, The distribution of Carassius gibelio (Bloch, 1782) (Teleostei: Cyprinidae) in Thrace (Turkey). Zool. Middle East, 31 (2014), 63–66.
  • A. İlhan, S. Balık, H. M. Sarı, M. R. Ustaoğlu, Batı ve Orta Anadolu, Güney Marmara, Trakya ve Batı Karadeniz bölgeleri içsularındaki Carassius (Cyprinidae, Pisces) Türleri ve Dağılımları. E. Ü. Su Ürünleri Dergisi, 22(3-4) (2005) 343–346.
  • M. Koyun, F. N. Altınel, Metazoan Parasites of Bleak (Alburnus alburnus), Crucian Carp (Carassius carassius) and Golden Carp (Carassius auratus) in Enne Dam Lake, Turkey. International Journal of Zoological Research, 3(2) (2007) 94–100.
  • S. Uğurlu, N. Polat, Samsun ili tatlısu kaynaklarında yaşayan egzotik balık türleri. Journal of Fisheries Sciences.com, 1(3) (2007) , 139–151.
  • Ö. Emiroğlu, Alien fish species in upper Sakarya River and their distribution. Afr. J. Biotechnol., 10(2011) (73), 16674–16681.
  • H. Aydın, Ö. Gaygusuz, A. S. Tarkan, N. Top, Ö. Emiroğlu, Ç. Gürsoy Gaygusuz, Invasion of freshwater bodies in the Marmara region (northwestern Turkey) by non-native gibel carp, Carassius gibelio (Bloch, 1782). Turk. J. Zool., 35(6) (2011) 829–836.
  • J. Freyhof, B. Yoğurtçuoğlu, A. Jouladeh-Roudbar, C. Kaya, Handbook of Freshwater Fishes of West Asia. De Gruyter, Berlin, Germany, 2025.
  • A. S. Tarkan, A story of piranha in Sapanca Lake. Av Doğa, 41 (2006) 75–77.
  • B. Yoğurtçuoğlu, F. G. Ekmekçi, First record of the giant pangasius, Pangasius sanitwongsei (Actinopterygii: Siluriformes: Pangasiidae), from central Anatolia, Turkey. Acta Ichthyol. Piscat., 48(3) (2018) 241–244.
  • L. Nico, P. Fuller, M. Neilson, Xiphophorus hellerii Heckel, 1848: U.S. Geological Survey, Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database, Gainesville, FL, 2025.
  • M. Maddern, H. S. Gill, D. L. Morgan, Biology and invasive potential of the introduced swordtail Xiphophorus hellerii Heckel (Poeciliidae) in Western Australia. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems, 21 (2011) 282–291.
  • C. Perdikaris, N. Koutsikos, L. Vardakas, D. Kommatas, P. Simonovic, I. Paschos, V. Detsis, L. Vilizzi, G. H. Copp, Risk screening of non-native, translocated and traded aquarium freshwater fishes in Greece using Fish Invasiveness Screening Kit. Fisheries Manag. Ecol., 23 (2016) 32–43.
  • R. Froese, D. Pauly (Eds.), FishBase. World Wide Web electronic publication. www.fishbase.org, version (04/2025).
  • B. Yogurtcuoglu, F.G. Ekmekci, Variation in Life History and Feeding Ecology of the Invasive Eastern Mosquitofish, Gambusia holbrooki Girard, 1859 (Poeciliidae), in a Groundwater-dependent Wetland in Turkey, Acta Zool. Bulgar., Suppl. 9 (2017) 117-130.
  • J. L. Haynes, Standardized classification of Poeciliid development for life history studies. Copeia,( 1995) 147–154.
  • J.H. Zar, Biostatistical analysis, 3rd edn., Prentice-Hall, New Jersey, USA, 1996.
  • M. Maddern, Xiphophorus hellerii, In: CABI Compendium, CAB International, Wallingford, UK, https://www.cabidigitallibrary.org/doi/full/10.1079/cabicompendium.59751, (2009).
  • D.A. Milton, A.H. Arthington, Reproductive biology of Gambusia affinis holbrooki Baird & Girard, Xiphophorus hellerii (Gunther) and X. maculatus (Heckel) (Pisces: Poeciliidae) in Queensland, Australia, J. Fish Biol., 23 (1983) 23-41.
  • Q.M. Tuckett, J.L. Ritch, K.M. Lawson, J.E. Hill, Landscape-scale survey of non-native fishes near ornamental aquaculture facilities in Florida, USA, Biol. Invasions, 19 (2017) 223-237.
  • A.E. Deacon, I.W. Ramnarine, A.E. Magurran, How reproductive ecology contributes to the spread of a globally invasive fish, PLoS One, 6(9) (2011) e24416.
  • I.J. De Moor, M.N. Bruton (Compilers), Atlas of alien and translocated indigenous aquatic animals in southern Africa, National Scientific Programmes Unit: CSIR, SANSP Report 144, (1988), pp. 317.
  • K.D. Kallman, R.B. Walter, D.C. Morizot, S. Kazianis, Two new species of Xiphophorus (Poeciliidae) from the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico, with a discussion of the distribution of the X. clemenciae clade, Am. Mus. Novit., 3441 (2004) 1-34.
  • B. Yoğurtçuoğlu, Simultaneous reproduction of two killifish congeners in the highly alkaline Lake Salda (Turkey), Marine and Freshwater Research, 70 (2019) 1633–1642
  • D. Innal, F. Erkakan, Effects of exotic and translocated fish species in the inland waters of Turkey, Rev. Fish Biol. Fisher., 16 (2006) 39-50.
  • I.C. Duggan, The freshwater aquarium trade as a vector for incidental invertebrate fauna, Biol. Invasions, 12 (2010) 3757-3770.
  • R.J. McKay, Introductions of exotic fishes in Australia, In: W.R. Courtenay, J.R. Stauffer (Eds.), Distribution, Biology and Management of Exotic Fishes, John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, USA,1984.
  • A.H. Arthington, Diet of Gambusia affinis holbrooki, Xiphophorus hellerii, X. maculatus and Poecilia reticulata (Pisces: Poeciliidae) in streams of southeastern Queensland, Australia, Asian Fisheries Science, 2 (1989) 193-212.
  • R.A. Englund, The impacts of introduced poeciliid fish and Odonata on the endemic megalagrion (Odonata) damselflies of Oahu Island, Hawaii, Journal of Insect Conservation, 3 (1999) 225-243.
  • D. Dudgeon, R. Corlett, Hills and Streams: An Ecology of Hong Kong, Hong Kong University Press, Hong Kong , 1994.
  • M. Goren, B.S. Galil, A review of changes in the fish assemblages of Levantine inland and marine ecosystems following the introduction of non-native fishes, J. Appl. Ichthyol., 21 (2005) 364-370.
  • W.R. Courtenay, C.R. Robins, R.M. Bailey, J.E. Deacon, Records of exotic fishes from Idaho and Wyoming, Great Basin Naturalist, 47 (1988) 523-526.
There are 48 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Community Ecology
Journal Section Research Article
Authors

Fatma Demir 0000-0003-2069-9974

Şerife Gülsün Kırankaya 0000-0002-5171-9256

Project Number DÜBAP Project number: 2024.05.01.1469
Submission Date June 10, 2025
Acceptance Date July 4, 2025
Early Pub Date December 16, 2025
Publication Date December 26, 2025
Published in Issue Year 2025 Volume: 53 Issue: 5

Cite

APA Demir, F., & Kırankaya, Ş. G. (2025). Reproduction of Established Non-native Xiphophorus hellerii in the Euphrates Drainage, Türkiye. Hacettepe Journal of Biology and Chemistry, 53(5), 15-22. https://doi.org/10.15671/hjbc.1717036
AMA Demir F, Kırankaya ŞG. Reproduction of Established Non-native Xiphophorus hellerii in the Euphrates Drainage, Türkiye. HJBC. December 2025;53(5):15-22. doi:10.15671/hjbc.1717036
Chicago Demir, Fatma, and Şerife Gülsün Kırankaya. “Reproduction of Established Non-Native Xiphophorus Hellerii in the Euphrates Drainage, Türkiye”. Hacettepe Journal of Biology and Chemistry 53, no. 5 (December 2025): 15-22. https://doi.org/10.15671/hjbc.1717036.
EndNote Demir F, Kırankaya ŞG (December 1, 2025) Reproduction of Established Non-native Xiphophorus hellerii in the Euphrates Drainage, Türkiye. Hacettepe Journal of Biology and Chemistry 53 5 15–22.
IEEE F. Demir and Ş. G. Kırankaya, “Reproduction of Established Non-native Xiphophorus hellerii in the Euphrates Drainage, Türkiye”, HJBC, vol. 53, no. 5, pp. 15–22, 2025, doi: 10.15671/hjbc.1717036.
ISNAD Demir, Fatma - Kırankaya, Şerife Gülsün. “Reproduction of Established Non-Native Xiphophorus Hellerii in the Euphrates Drainage, Türkiye”. Hacettepe Journal of Biology and Chemistry 53/5 (December2025), 15-22. https://doi.org/10.15671/hjbc.1717036.
JAMA Demir F, Kırankaya ŞG. Reproduction of Established Non-native Xiphophorus hellerii in the Euphrates Drainage, Türkiye. HJBC. 2025;53:15–22.
MLA Demir, Fatma and Şerife Gülsün Kırankaya. “Reproduction of Established Non-Native Xiphophorus Hellerii in the Euphrates Drainage, Türkiye”. Hacettepe Journal of Biology and Chemistry, vol. 53, no. 5, 2025, pp. 15-22, doi:10.15671/hjbc.1717036.
Vancouver Demir F, Kırankaya ŞG. Reproduction of Established Non-native Xiphophorus hellerii in the Euphrates Drainage, Türkiye. HJBC. 2025;53(5):15-22.

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