scholarly journals Use of DNA barcode in the identification of catfishes (Siluriformes: Ariidae) from Malaysia

2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 1358-1366
Author(s):  
MOHD LUTFI ABDULLAH ◽  
SITI AZIZAH MOHD NOR ◽  
DARLINA MD. NAIM

Abdullah ML, Nor SAM, Naim DMd. 2017. Use of DNA barcode in the identification of catfishes (Siluriformes: Ariidae) from Malaysia. Biodiversitas 18: 1358-1366. The genus Ariidae contains many valuable fish species threatened by overfishing, but knowledge on distribution and threats is still limited due to taxonomic ambiguities. The aim of this study was to apply DNA barcoding techniques to establish a resource of DNA for identification of Ariidae species in Malaysia. A 621 bp of mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) gene was utilized to resolve phylogenetic relationships and molecular taxonomy of eight presumed Malaysian Ariid species. We found the monophyly of most species was well established with a mean Kimura-2 parameter (K2P) interspecies distance of 9.6% except for two species, Arius venosus, and Nemapteryx caelata that have very low interspecies genetic distance. The BLAST result shows only two species matched the presumably eight identified fish species. Such discrepancies could arise as a result of misidentifications or errors in GenBank database input, hybridization or incomplete lineage sorting. We suggest the use of DNA barcoding is integrated into the workflow during taxonomic studies as it could significantly increase knowledge about species distributions.

2013 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 113-121
Author(s):  
Madhu Thapliyal ◽  
Bipin Kumar Sati ◽  
Ravi Kumar ◽  
Tribhuwan Chandra ◽  
Ashish Thapliyal

The entire Himalayan region is well known as a global hotspot for biodiversity. Many workers have documented different aspect of biodiversity.  The Uttarakhand Himalaya region, a part of Himalayan system, is very rich in fresh water aquatic biodiversity because it has many fresh water streams and rivers within a short distance of 200 miles. All these fresh water bodies harbor diverse aquatic fauna with fishes being the most extensively studied. There are many fish species reported by many authors in Uttarakhand. Many of the fishes have similar morphological characters (morpho-metrics) and are difficult to identify. Attempts have been made to generate the DNA barcode of fishes but most of the attempt are limited to major rivers i.e. the Ganges and the Yamuna. Besides these two prominent river (the Ganges & the Yamuna), there are many supporting streams and small tributaries that are also inhabited by many species. No “long term” and “entire river scan” for fish species has ever been conducted in Uttarakhand. Our research aims to generate a molecular database (DNA Barcode) for entire fish species fauna in each small river/stream of Uttarakhand.  Using a combination of morphometric & DNA bar-coding data will provide an efficient method for species level identification and contributes considerably to taxonomic and biodiversity research. The present study is first step towards establishing molecular taxonomy database of Uttarakhand based upon the bar coding pattern of cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) gene.  We carried out an “entire river scan” of River Song (a tributary of river Ganges).  50 samples were collected from various sampling sites along the entire stretch of river and analyzed.   Data was uploaded into the BOLD database and the analysis of data using this database suggests that the genetic variability (K2P distance) distribution of 50 individuals belonging with 15 species.The average intraspecific variation using K2P and NJ methods/models was assessed. The mean intraspecific distance was less than 1.45% for 32% of species. Mean K2P distance within species, genus and family was 0.1%, 16.3% and 21.70% respectively. Our results suggest that River Song has diverse fish fauna with substantial genetic diversity.  Data from Barillius species suggests that this species has a very high variation.  There is ahighly probability that as all the rivers are scanned new data on endemic and exotic fish fauna diversity will emerge which would be helpful in conservation efforts.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 308
Author(s):  
Rahmat Sawalman ◽  
Hawis Madduppa

HighlightIdentification and morphological analysis of Selaroides leptolepis fish.Molecular analysis using the DNA Barcoding method with the COI gene (mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I).The number of base pairs in S. leptolepis from the sequencing results was 675bp.The morphological and molecular similarities of Selaroides leptolepis fishAbstractYellowstripe scad is one of the commercially important fish from the Carangidae family, which is marketed at Muara Baru Modern Fish Market, North Jakarta. In- formation regarding the presence of Selaroides leptolepis fish in the waters allows for effective conservation, and management of marine resources. A morphological identification of fish species is still considered inaccurate, so the molecular anal- ysis is necessary. This study aims to identify commercially important fish species deriving from Muara Baru Modern Fish Market, North Jakarta, employing mor- phological, and molecular analysis. A total of 30 specimens were collected from the field. The morphological analysis utilized a visual identification method, and morphometric measurement, while molecular analysis with DNA barcoding em- ployed the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) gene. The results of the morphological analysis indicated that the fish species were yellowstripe scad (S. leptolepis). It also followed the results of molecular analysis of DNA barcoding that the fish was a S. leptolepis species. Therefore, the combination of morphological and genetic analysis has succeeded in identifying the fish species of S. leptolepis.


Author(s):  
Daniel Lukic ◽  
Jonas Eberle ◽  
Jana Thormann ◽  
Carolus Holzschuh ◽  
Dirk Ahrens

DNA-barcoding and DNA-based species delimitation are major tools in DNA taxonomy. Sampling has been a central debate in this context, because the geographical composition of samples affect the accuracy and performance of DNA-barcoding. Performance of complex DNA-based species delimitation is to be tested under simpler conditions in absence of geographic sampling bias. Here, we present an empirical data set sampled from a single locality in a Southeast-Asian biodiversity hotspot (Laos: Phou Pan mountain). We investigate the performance of various species delimitation approaches on a megadiverse assemblage of herbivore chafer beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) to infer whether species delimitation suffers in the same way from exaggerate infraspecific variation despite the lack of geographic genetic variation that led to inconsistencies between entities from DNA-based and morphology-based species inference in previous studies. For this purpose, a 658 bp fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (cox1) was analysed for a total of 186 individuals of 56 morphospecies. Tree based and distance based species delimitation methods were used. All approaches showed a rather limited match ratio (max. 77%) with morphospecies. PTP and TCS prevailingly over-splitted morphospecies, while 3% clustering and ABGD also lumped several species into one entity. ABGD revealed the highest congruence between molecular operational taxonomic units (MOTUs) and morphospecies. Disagreements between morphospecies and MOTUs were discussed in the context of historically acquired geographic genetic differentiation, incomplete lineage sorting, and hybridization. The study once again highlights how important morphology still is in order to correctly interpret the results of molecular species delimitation.


Zootaxa ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 2832 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANDREW R. CLINE ◽  
JEFFREY P. HUETHER

Tricrania LeConte is revised. One new synonymy is proposed: T. murrayi LeConte 1860 = T. stansburii (Haldeman) 1852, syn. nov. More than 1000 specimens of T. sanguinipennis (Say) and over 1100 specimens of T. stansburii were assessed to provide accurate host data, phenological periods, and distributional limits for each species. Descriptions of adults and 1 st instar larvae, diagnostic characters, and identification keys also are provided. A 565-bp fragment of mtDNA from the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase 1 (COI) gene, i.e. the DNA barcode region, is provided as an additional source for identification. A taxonomic history of the genus and inclusive species is given, as well as remarks on the placement of Tricrania in Nemognathinae.


Zootaxa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 4277 (2) ◽  
pp. 228 ◽  
Author(s):  
RAFAEL JOSÉ VIVERO ◽  
EDUAR ELÍAS BEJARANO ◽  
LUIS GREGORIO ESTRADA ◽  
FERNANDO FLÓREZ ◽  
EDGAR ORTEGA-GÓMEZ ◽  
...  

Although phlebotomine sand flies breeding sites have been identified and recorded by several studies, the microhabitats exploited by these insects remain little-known and hard to find. In this context, the difficulty of finding immature stages, and the limited number of taxonomic studies to identify immature stages of phlebotomine sand flies, are considered the major obstacles when attempting a complete inventory of Lutzomyia species. The objective of this study is to validate Cytochrome Oxidase I (Barcode region) as a marker for the identification of immature stages of Lutzomyia species recovered from natural breeding sites in Colombia. Among 142 collected sand flies, 18 immature individuals that did not complete their life cycle were identified to species level through sequencing of the COI gene. Values of K2P genetic distance between 0.002–0.031 allowed the identification of larvae at species level. The bootstrap support values (96%) in the Neighbor-Joining dendrogram were consistent for the majority of the established MOTUS of Lutzomyia atroclavata, Lutzomyia micropyga, Lutzomyia serrana, Lutzomyia cayennensis, Lutzomyia rangeliana, Lutzomyia shannoni and some species of the genus Brumptomyia. The COI gene is validated as a marker for the identification of immature stages of the genus Lutzomyia.  


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 333-342
Author(s):  
Abu Faiz Md Aslam ◽  
Sharmin Sultana ◽  
Sumita Rani Das ◽  
Abdul Jabber Howlader

Tribolium confusum and Tribolium castaneum (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) are two very confusing pest species while identification is done on the basis of morphology only. Such pests are discovered in stored grain as immature stages, which further complicates the identification process. Accurate identification of these pests is urgently required for integrated pest management. In this research, DNA barcoding was used to identify these pests accurately at any life stage. A 658 bp fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene was analyzed. DNA barcode dataset of T. confusum (GeneBank Acc. no. MK120453.1) and T. castaneum (Acc. no. MK411585.1) were constructed. The nucleotide composition reveals that average AT contents (59.9%) were higher than the GC contents (38.6%). Phylogenetic analysis by maximum likelihood method showed that both the species were originated from a common major clade. About 17.13% nucleotide differences were noted between the CO1 sequences by multiple sequence alignment. The interspecies nucleotide genetic distance (0.200) was calculated using Kimura 2 parameter. Haplotype analysis showed high genetic diversity (112 mutaional steps) among them. Bangladesh J. Zool. 47(2): 333-342, 2019


Author(s):  
Takeru Nakazato

DNA barcoding technology has become employed widely for biodiversity and molecular biology researchers to identify species and analyze their phylogeny. Recently, DNA metabarcoding and environmental DNA (eDNA) technology have developed by expanding the concept of DNA barcoding. These techniques analyze the diversity and quantity of organisms within an environment by detecting biogenic DNA in water and soil. It is particularly popular for monitoring fish species living in rivers and lakes (Takahara et al. 2012). BOLD Systems (Barcode of Life Database systems, Ratnasingham and Hebert 2007) is a database for DNA barcoding, archiving 8.5 million of barcodes (as of August 2020) along with the voucher specimen, from which the DNA barcode sequence is derived, including taxonomy, collected country, and museum vouchered as metadata (e.g. https://www.boldsystems.org/index.php/Public_RecordView?processid=TRIBS054-16). Also, many barcoding data are submitted to GenBank (Sayers et al. 2020), which is a database for DNA sequences managed by NCBI (National Center for Biotechnology Information, US). The number of the records of DNA barcodes, i.e. COI (cytochrome c oxidase I) gene for animal, has grown significantly (Porter and Hajibabaei 2018). BOLD imports DNA barcoding data from GenBank, and lots of DNA barcoding data in GenBank are also assigned BOLD IDs. However, we have to refer to both BOLD and GenBank data when performing DNA barcoding. I have previously investigated the registration of DNA barcoding data in GenBank, especially the association with BOLD, using insects and flowering plants as examples (Nakazato 2019). Here, I surveyed the number of species covered by BOLD and GenBank. I used fish data as an example because eDNA research is particularly focused on fish. I downloaded all GenBank files for vertebrates from NCBI FTP (File Transfer Protocol) sites (as of November 2019). Of the GenBank fish entries, 86,958 (7.3%) were assigned BOLD identifiers (IDs). The NCBI taxonomy database has registrations for 39,127 species of fish, and 20,987 scientific names at the species level (i.e., excluding names that included sp., cf. or aff.). GenBank entries with BOLD IDs covered 11,784 species (30.1%) and 8,665 species-level names (41.3%). I also obtained whole "specimens and sequences combined data" for fish from BOLD systems (as of November 2019). In the BOLD, there are 273,426 entries that are registered as fish. Of these entries, 211,589 BOLD entries were assigned GenBank IDs, i.e. with values in “genbank_accession” column, and 121,748 entries were imported from GenBank, i.e. with "Mined from GenBank, NCBI" description in "institution_storing" column. The BOLD data covered 18,952 fish species and 15,063 species-level names, but 35,500 entries were assigned no species-level names and 22,123 entries were not even filled with family-level names. At the species level, 8,067 names co-occurred in GenBank and BOLD, with 6,997 BOLD-specific names and 599 GenBank-specific names. GenBank has 425,732 fish entries with voucher IDs, of which 340,386 were not assigned a BOLD ID. Of these 340,386 entries, 43,872 entries are registrations for COI genes, which could be candidates for DNA barcodes. These candidates include 4,201 species that are not included in BOLD, thus adding these data will enable us to identify 19,863 fish to the species level. For researchers, it would be very useful if both BOLD and GenBank DNA barcoding data could be searched in one place. For this purpose, it is necessary to integrate data from the two databases. A lot of biodiversity data are recorded based on the Darwin Core standard while DNA sequencing data are sometimes integrated or cross-linked by RDF (Resource Description Framework). It may not be technically difficult to integrate these data, but the species data referenced differ from the EoL (The Encyclopedia of Life) for BOLD and the NCBI taxonomy for GenBank, and the differences in taxonomic systems make it difficult to match by scientific name description. GenBank has fields for the latitude and longitude of the specimens sampled, and Porter and Hajibabaei 2018 argue that this information should be enhanced. However, this information may be better described in the specimen and occurrence databases. The integration of barcoding data with the specimen and occurrence data will solve these problems. Most importantly, it will save the researcher from having to register the same information in multiple databases. In the field of biodiversity, only DNA barcode sequences may have been focused on and used as gene sequences. The museomics community regards museum-preserved specimens as rich resources for DNA studies because their biodiversity information can accompany the extraction and analysis of their DNA (Nakazato 2018). GenBank is useful for biodiversity studies due to its low rate of mislabelling (Leray et al. 2019). In the future, we will be working with a variety of DNA, including genomes from museum specimens as well as DNA barcoding. This will require more integrated use of biodiversity information and DNA sequence data. This integration is also of interest to molecular biologists and bioinformaticians.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 272-278
Author(s):  
Sucipto Hariyanto ◽  
Hasan Adro’i ◽  
Mahrus Ali ◽  
Bambang Irawan

Poecilia reticulata is a freshwater fish from the northeastern part of South America and spread widely to various countries in Asia and other continents. However, research about P. reticulate is limited even though it is a well-known fish species in Indonesia. The purpose of study was to identify the fish species of P. reticulata through DNA barcoding using the COI gene to determine the phylogenetic relationships among fish populations in East Java, Indonesia. In a present study, there were eight samples of P. reticulata from four different freshwater locations in East Java. Extraction, amplification, and sequencing of DNA samples were conducted to obtain the genetic data and construct a phylogenetic tree based on DNA sequences. The COI gene is the most popular markers to study genetic populations and phylogeography among the animal kingdom. Our phylogenetic reconstruction showed a clear that there were two groups of P. reticulata. The first group was obtain through species from East Java, Sukabumi, West Java (KU692776.1), Dominican Republic, Pandeglang, Banten and Myanmar. The second group was P. reticulata from southern Africa, Brazil, and Sukabumi, West Java (KU692775.1). The result of this study indicate that the guppy fish in East Java identic with P. reticulata from West Java (KU692776.1), which a widely used in classification based on evolutionary relationships. The findings of this study have important implication for the development of advance research about adaptation, phylogeny, and evolution of fish, especially of guppy fish.


PeerJ ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. e11843
Author(s):  
Carlos Prieto ◽  
Christophe Faynel ◽  
Robert Robbins ◽  
Axel Hausmann

Background With about 1,000 species in the Neotropics, the Eumaeini (Theclinae) are one of the most diverse butterfly tribes. Correct morphology-based identifications are challenging in many genera due to relatively little interspecific differences in wing patterns. Geographic infraspecific variation is sometimes more substantial than variation between species. In this paper we present a large DNA barcode dataset of South American Lycaenidae. We analyze how well DNA barcode BINs match morphologically delimited species. Methods We compare morphology-based species identifications with the clustering of molecular operational taxonomic units (MOTUs) delimitated by the RESL algorithm in BOLD, which assigns Barcode Index Numbers (BINs). We examine intra- and interspecific divergences for genera represented by at least four morphospecies. We discuss the existence of local barcode gaps in a genus by genus analysis. We also note differences in the percentage of species with barcode gaps in groups of lowland and high mountain genera. Results We identified 2,213 specimens and obtained 1,839 sequences of 512 species in 90 genera. Overall, the mean intraspecific divergence value of CO1 sequences was 1.20%, while the mean interspecific divergence between nearest congeneric neighbors was 4.89%, demonstrating the presence of a barcode gap. However, the gap seemed to disappear from the entire set when comparing the maximum intraspecific distance (8.40%) with the minimum interspecific distance (0.40%). Clear barcode gaps are present in many genera but absent in others. From the set of specimens that yielded COI fragment lengths of at least 650 bp, 75% of the a priori morphology-based identifications were unambiguously assigned to a single Barcode Index Number (BIN). However, after a taxonomic a posteriori review, the percentage of matched identifications rose to 85%. BIN splitting was observed for 17% of the species and BIN sharing for 9%. We found that genera that contain primarily lowland species show higher percentages of local barcode gaps and congruence between BINs and morphology than genera that contain exclusively high montane species. The divergence values to the nearest neighbors were significantly lower in high Andean species while the intra-specific divergence values were significantly lower in the lowland species. These results raise questions regarding the causes of observed low inter and high intraspecific genetic variation. We discuss incomplete lineage sorting and hybridization as most likely causes of this phenomenon, as the montane species concerned are relatively young and hybridization is probable. The release of our data set represents an essential baseline for a reference library for biological assessment studies of butterflies in mega diverse countries using modern high-throughput technologies an highlights the necessity of taxonomic revisions for various genera combining both molecular and morphological data.


Author(s):  
Carlos Pedraza-Lara ◽  
Marco A Garduño-Sánchez ◽  
Isabel Téllez-García ◽  
Stephany Rodríguez-González ◽  
Eduardo Nuple-Juárez ◽  
...  

Abstract Identification of species involved in cadaveric decomposition, such as scavenger Diptera, is a fundamental step for the use of entomological evidence in court. Identification based on morphology is widely used in forensic cases; however, taxonomic knowledge of scavenger fauna is poor for many groups and for many countries, particularly Neotropical ones. A number of studies have documented the utility of a DNA barcoding strategy to assist in the identification of poorly known and diverse groups, particularly in cases involving immature states or fragmented organisms. To provide baseline knowledge of the diversity of scavenger Diptera in the Valley of Mexico, we generated a DNA barcode collection comprised of sequences of the cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (COI) gene for all families sampled at a nature reserve located in this region. We collected and identified specimens on the basis of morphology and a species delimitation analysis. Our analyses of 339 individuals delineated 42 species distributed across nine families of Diptera. The richest families were Calliphoridae (9 species), Sarcophagidae (7 species), and Phoridae (6 species). We found many of the species previously recorded for the Valley of Mexico, plus 18 new records for the region. Our study highlights the utility of DNA barcoding as a first-step strategy to assess species richness of poorly studied scavenger fly taxa.


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