Estimates of Genetic Introgression, Gene Tree Reticulation, Taxon Divergence, and Sustainability of DNA Barcoding Based on Genetic Molecular Markers

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 275-294
Author(s):  
Yu. Ph. Kartavtsev ◽  
A. D. Redin
2016 ◽  
Vol 339 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 123-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asif Shabodin Tamboli ◽  
Swapnil Mahadeo Patil ◽  
Avinash Ramchandra Gholave ◽  
Suhas Kishor Kadam ◽  
Shreya Vijaykumar Kotibhaskar ◽  
...  

As we are moving forward into the modern era of science, several new technologies have revolutionized various branches of science. Techniques of biodiversity conservation, fish biology etc. has also adapted to modern techniques. For a long time, most of the researches in taxonomy, including fisheries science were based on morphology and traditional methods. After the decade of 90’s, slowly severalmolecular markers like RFLP, RAPD, SNP’s etc. made inroad into taxonomy and fisheries. Molecular markers have several applications in the field of livestock improvement and understanding population dynamics to name a few. Since the 2004, a specific molecular marker, generally known as DNA Barcoding for species identification, came up. This molecular marker is a part of mitochondrial genome that encodes for Cytochrome C Oxidase Unit I (also called as COX or COI). It is advantageous because it has been tested across several animal species and it can differentiate species very well. This marker has also been used as a forensic tool to identify the species. In the current paper, we have used this molecular marker to decode evolution of native fishes of Garhwal Himalayan region. Over 350 barcodes were developed and these barcodes were used to for phylogenetic analysis.


2012 ◽  
Vol 44 (6) ◽  
pp. 757-772 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristiina MARK ◽  
Lauri SAAG ◽  
Andres SAAG ◽  
Arne THELL ◽  
Tiina RANDLANE

AbstractThe delimitation of two morphologically similar and not easily separable Vulpicida species, V. juniperinus and V. tubulosus, is analyzed using nuclear ITS and Mcm7, and mitochondrial SSU DNA sequences. Seventy-nine Vulpicida specimens, most from the two focal taxa, are included in the three-locus gene tree. The results from Bayesian and parsimony analyses are presented. There are strong conflicts between the single locus gene trees. Vulpicida juniperinus and V. tubulosus are divided into two clearly distinguished groups in the ITS and concatenated B/MCMC tree. However, these species are mixed in both clades, appearing polyphyletic. Currently accepted V. juniperinus and V. tubulosus are not distinct according to the loci studied. Vulpicida pinastri appears monophyletic based on the available sequences.


2018 ◽  
Vol 109 (05) ◽  
pp. 583-594 ◽  
Author(s):  
L.M. Torres-Vila ◽  
R. Bonal

AbstractThree large saproxylic cerambycids with different pest/legal status co-occur in the Iberian oak woodlands, Cerambyx welensii (Cw), Cerambyx cerdo (Cc) and Prinobius myardi (Pm): Cw is an emerging pest, Cc is a protected but sometimes harmful species and Pm is a secondary/minor pest. A precise taxonomic diagnosis is necessary for research, management or protection purposes, but may be problematic mainly because Cw and Cc larvae are morphologically indistinguishable. To resolve this constraint, we genotyped adults, larvae and eggs collected over a wide geographical range using the mitochondrial barcoding of the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI). A Neighbour-Joining tree phylogram revealed three distinct clusters corresponding to Cw, Cc and Pm. We further first sequenced for Cw and Cc two mitochondrial (12S rRNA and 16S rRNA) and one nuclear (28S rRNA) gene fragments. For the first two genes, interspecific divergence was lower than in COI, and for the 28S (lower mutation rate), the two species shared identical haplotypes. Two approaches for species delimitation (General Mixed Yule Coalescent (GMYC), Barcode Index Number (BIN)) confirmed the species distinctiveness of Cc and Cw. The Bayesian COI gene tree showed a remarkable genetic divergence between Cc populations from Iberia and the rest of Europe. Such divergence has relevant taxonomic connotations and stresses the importance of a wide geographical scale sampling for accurate DNA barcoding species identification. Incongruities between morphology/lineage and COI barcodes in some individuals revealed natural hybridization between Cw and Cc. Natural hybridization is important from a phylogenetic/evolutionary perspective in these cerambycids, but the prevalence of (and the behavioural/ecological factors involved in) interspecific cross-breeding remain to be investigated.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. e101106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Defang Zhang ◽  
Tao Xia ◽  
Maomao Yan ◽  
Xiaogang Dai ◽  
Jin Xu ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 371 (1702) ◽  
pp. 20150335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diego Mallo ◽  
David Posada

The unprecedented amount of data resulting from next-generation sequencing has opened a new era in phylogenetic estimation. Although large datasets should, in theory, increase phylogenetic resolution, massive, multilocus datasets have uncovered a great deal of phylogenetic incongruence among different genomic regions, due both to stochastic error and to the action of different evolutionary process such as incomplete lineage sorting, gene duplication and loss and horizontal gene transfer. This incongruence violates one of the fundamental assumptions of the DNA barcoding approach, which assumes that gene history and species history are identical. In this review, we explain some of the most important challenges we will have to face to reconstruct the history of species, and the advantages and disadvantages of different strategies for the phylogenetic analysis of multilocus data. In particular, we describe the evolutionary events that can generate species tree—gene tree discordance, compare the most popular methods for species tree reconstruction, highlight the challenges we need to face when using them and discuss their potential utility in barcoding. Current barcoding methods sacrifice a great amount of statistical power by only considering one locus, and a transition to multilocus barcodes would not only improve current barcoding methods, but also facilitate an eventual transition to species-tree-based barcoding strategies, which could better accommodate scenarios where the barcode gap is too small or inexistent. This article is part of the themed issue ‘From DNA barcodes to biomes’.


2011 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
STEPHANE A. P. DEROCLES ◽  
ANNE LE RALEC ◽  
MANUEL PLANTEGENEST ◽  
BERNARD CHAUBET ◽  
CORINNE CRUAUD ◽  
...  

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