DNA barcoding reveals both cryptic as true circumpolar species in Antarctic Lysianassoidea (Amphipoda)

Recent molecular analyses revealed that several so-called “circum-Antarctic” benthic crustacean species appeared to be complexes of cryptic species with restricted distributions. In the Southern Ocean, the superfamily Lysianassoidea is one of the most important amphipod groups, both in terms of spec...

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Main Authors: Havermans, Charlotte, Nagy, Zoltán T., Sonet, Gontran, De Broyer, Claude, Martin, Patrick, XIVth International Colloquium on Amphipoda
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2078/121213
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spelling ftunistlouisbrus:oai:dial.uclouvain.be:boreal:121213 2023-05-15T14:05:05+02:00 DNA barcoding reveals both cryptic as true circumpolar species in Antarctic Lysianassoidea (Amphipoda) Havermans, Charlotte Nagy, Zoltán T. Sonet, Gontran De Broyer, Claude Martin, Patrick XIVth International Colloquium on Amphipoda 2010 http://hdl.handle.net/2078/121213 eng eng boreal:121213 http://hdl.handle.net/2078/121213 info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2010 ftunistlouisbrus 2018-05-16T22:52:22Z Recent molecular analyses revealed that several so-called “circum-Antarctic” benthic crustacean species appeared to be complexes of cryptic species with restricted distributions. In the Southern Ocean, the superfamily Lysianassoidea is one of the most important amphipod groups, both in terms of species number and abundance. In this study we used a DNA barcoding approach based on mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I gene sequences in order to detect possible cryptic diversity and to test the circumpolarity of some lysianassoid species. This gene fragment performed as a powerful barcoding marker, showing a clear barcoding gap between intra- and interspecific divergences of well-identified species. In several species, a genetic homogeneity was found even among specimens from remote sampling sites which indicates a possible circum-Antarctic and eurybathic distribution. In other species, genetically divergent lineages and possible cryptic taxa were revealed. Results might be explained by the different dispersal and gene flow capability of these amphipods as well as by the generally insufficient knowledge on the biodiversity of the Antarctic fauna related to species identification. Based on these observations, our current view on the species richness and distribution of the Antarctic lysianassoids may have to be modified. As polar regions are more affected by climate change than others, biodiversity assessment studies are of particular importance since they may serve as a basis for monitoring and conservational efforts. In this context, DNA barcoding can thus be a useful and cost-effective tool. Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Southern Ocean DIAL@USL-B (Université Saint-Louis, Bruxelles) Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection DIAL@USL-B (Université Saint-Louis, Bruxelles)
op_collection_id ftunistlouisbrus
language English
description Recent molecular analyses revealed that several so-called “circum-Antarctic” benthic crustacean species appeared to be complexes of cryptic species with restricted distributions. In the Southern Ocean, the superfamily Lysianassoidea is one of the most important amphipod groups, both in terms of species number and abundance. In this study we used a DNA barcoding approach based on mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I gene sequences in order to detect possible cryptic diversity and to test the circumpolarity of some lysianassoid species. This gene fragment performed as a powerful barcoding marker, showing a clear barcoding gap between intra- and interspecific divergences of well-identified species. In several species, a genetic homogeneity was found even among specimens from remote sampling sites which indicates a possible circum-Antarctic and eurybathic distribution. In other species, genetically divergent lineages and possible cryptic taxa were revealed. Results might be explained by the different dispersal and gene flow capability of these amphipods as well as by the generally insufficient knowledge on the biodiversity of the Antarctic fauna related to species identification. Based on these observations, our current view on the species richness and distribution of the Antarctic lysianassoids may have to be modified. As polar regions are more affected by climate change than others, biodiversity assessment studies are of particular importance since they may serve as a basis for monitoring and conservational efforts. In this context, DNA barcoding can thus be a useful and cost-effective tool.
format Conference Object
author Havermans, Charlotte
Nagy, Zoltán T.
Sonet, Gontran
De Broyer, Claude
Martin, Patrick
XIVth International Colloquium on Amphipoda
spellingShingle Havermans, Charlotte
Nagy, Zoltán T.
Sonet, Gontran
De Broyer, Claude
Martin, Patrick
XIVth International Colloquium on Amphipoda
DNA barcoding reveals both cryptic as true circumpolar species in Antarctic Lysianassoidea (Amphipoda)
author_facet Havermans, Charlotte
Nagy, Zoltán T.
Sonet, Gontran
De Broyer, Claude
Martin, Patrick
XIVth International Colloquium on Amphipoda
author_sort Havermans, Charlotte
title DNA barcoding reveals both cryptic as true circumpolar species in Antarctic Lysianassoidea (Amphipoda)
title_short DNA barcoding reveals both cryptic as true circumpolar species in Antarctic Lysianassoidea (Amphipoda)
title_full DNA barcoding reveals both cryptic as true circumpolar species in Antarctic Lysianassoidea (Amphipoda)
title_fullStr DNA barcoding reveals both cryptic as true circumpolar species in Antarctic Lysianassoidea (Amphipoda)
title_full_unstemmed DNA barcoding reveals both cryptic as true circumpolar species in Antarctic Lysianassoidea (Amphipoda)
title_sort dna barcoding reveals both cryptic as true circumpolar species in antarctic lysianassoidea (amphipoda)
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2078/121213
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
op_relation boreal:121213
http://hdl.handle.net/2078/121213
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