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Marine nematode taxonomy in the DNA age: the present and future of molecular tools to access their biodiversity

Authors :
Paul De Ley
Maria Cristina Da Silva
Tania Tassinari Rieger
André Morgado Esteves
Neyvan Renato Rodrigues da Silva
Wilfrida Decraemer
Verônica Fonseca Genevois
Maria Tereza dos Santos Correia
Source :
NEMATOLOGY
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Abstract Molecular taxonomy is one of the most promising yet challenging fields of biology. Molecular markers such as nuclear and mitochondrial genes are being used in a variety of studies surveying marine nematode taxa. Sequences from more than 600 species have been deposited to date in online databases. These barcode sequences are assigned to 150 nominal species from 104 genera. There are 41 species assigned to Enoplea and 109 species to Chromadorea. Morphology-based surveys are greatly limited by processing speed, while barcoding approaches for nematodes are hampered by difficulties in matching sequence data with morphology-based taxonomy. DNA barcoding is a promising approach because some genes contain variable regions that are useful to discriminate species boundaries, discover cryptic species, quantify biodiversity and analyse phylogeny. We advocate a combination of several approaches in studies of molecular taxonomy, DNA barcoding and conventional taxonomy as a necessary step to enhance the knowledge of biodiversity of marine nematodes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13885545
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NEMATOLOGY
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eb31411fd32c88aaf5071881e4c207fc