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DNA barcoding of flowering plants in Sumatra, Indonesia

Authors :
Amandita, Fitri Y.
Rembold, Katja
Vornam, Barbara
Rahayu, Sri
Siregar, Iskandar Z.
Kreft, Holger
Finkeldey, Reiner
Source :
Amandita, Fitri Y.; Rembold, Katja; Vornam, Barbara; Rahayu, Sri; Siregar, Iskandar Z.; Kreft, Holger; Finkeldey, Reiner (2019). DNA barcoding of flowering plants in Sumatra, Indonesia. Ecology and evolution, 9(4), pp. 1858-1868. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 10.1002/ece3.4875 , Ecology and Evolution
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The rapid conversion of Southeast Asian lowland rainforests into monocultures calls for the development of rapid methods for species identification to support ecological research and sustainable land-use management. Here, we investigated the utilization of DNA barcodes for identifying flowering plants from Sumatra, Indonesia. A total of 1,207 matK barcodes (441 species) and 2,376 rbcL barcodes (750 species) were successfully generated. The barcode effectiveness is assessed using four approaches: (a) comparison between morphological and molecular identification results, (b) best-close match analysis with TaxonDNA, (c) barcoding gap analysis, and (d) formation of monophyletic groups. Results show that rbcL has a much higher level of sequence recoverability than matK (95% and 66%). The comparison between morphological and molecular identifications revealed that matK and rbcL worked best assigning a plant specimen to the genus level. Estimates of identification success using best-close match analysis showed that >70% of the investigated species were correctly identified when using single barcode. The use of two-loci barcodes was able to increase the identification success up to 80%. The barcoding gap analysis revealed that neither matK nor rbcL succeeded to create a clear gap between the intraspecific and interspecific divergences. However, these two barcodes were able to discriminate at least 70% of the species from each other. Fifteen genera and twenty-one species were found to be nonmonophyletic with both markers. The two-loci barcodes were sufficient to reconstruct evolutionary relationships among the plant taxa in the study area that are congruent with the broadly accepted APG III phylogeny. Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2019 peerReviewed

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Amandita, Fitri Y.; Rembold, Katja; Vornam, Barbara; Rahayu, Sri; Siregar, Iskandar Z.; Kreft, Holger; Finkeldey, Reiner (2019). DNA barcoding of flowering plants in Sumatra, Indonesia. Ecology and evolution, 9(4), pp. 1858-1868. John Wiley &amp; Sons, Inc. 10.1002/ece3.4875 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4875>, Ecology and Evolution
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....42b0ce214f573c875b535ae0faadfb3c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4875