Molecular species delimitation in the Racomitrium canescens Complex (Grimmiaceae) and Implications for DNA Barcoding of Species Complexes in Mosses

In bryophytes a morphological species concept is still most commonly employed, but delimitation of closely related species based on morphological characters is often difficult. Here we test morphological species circumscriptions in a species complex of the moss genus Racomitrium, the R. canescens co...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stech, Michael, Veldman, Sarina, Larraín, Juan, Muñoz, Jesús, Quandt, Dietmar, Hassel, Kristian, Kruijer, Hans
Other Authors: European Commission, Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología (España), Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/78164
https://doi.org/10.13039/501100000780
https://doi.org/10.13039/501100006280
Description
Summary:In bryophytes a morphological species concept is still most commonly employed, but delimitation of closely related species based on morphological characters is often difficult. Here we test morphological species circumscriptions in a species complex of the moss genus Racomitrium, the R. canescens complex, based on variable DNA sequence markers from the plastid (rps4-trnT-trnL region) and nuclear (nrITS) genomes. The extensive morphological variability within the complex has led to different opinions about the number of species and intraspecific taxa to be distinguished. Molecular phylogenetic reconstructions allowed to clearly distinguish all eight currently recognised species of the complex plus a ninth species that was inferred to belong to the complex in earlier molecular analyses. The taxonomic significance of intraspecific sequence variation is discussed. The present molecular data do not support the division of the R. canescens complex into two groups of species (subsections or sections). Most morphological characters, albeit being in part difficult to apply, are reliable for species identification in the R. canescens complex. However, misidentification of collections that were morphologically intermediate between species questioned the suitability of leaf shape as diagnostic character. Four partitions of the molecular markers (rps4-trnT, trnT-trnL, ITS1, ITS2) that could potentially be used for molecular species identification (DNA barcoding) performed almost equally well concerning amplification and sequencing success. Of these, ITS1 provided the highest species discrimination capacity and should be considered as a DNA barcoding marker for mosses, especially in complexes of closely related species. Molecular species identification should be complemented by redefining morphological characters, to develop a set of easy-to-use molecular and non-molecular identification tools for improving biodiversity assessments and ecological research including mosses. MS and HK received financial support from the European Centre for Arctic Environmental Research (projects ARCFAC-026129-2008-31, ARCFAC- 026129-2009-123) and the Dutch Organization for Scientific Research (NWO, project ALW-NAP/08-01). JM received financial support from the Ministry of Science and Technology of Spain (grant CGL2009-09530-BOS). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. Peer reviewed