The development and application of molecular tools to differentiate 'Dreissena' species

'Dreissena polymorpha' (Pallas 1771) and 'Dreissena bugensis' (Andrusov, 1897) are two species of invasive mollusc bivalves native to the Ponto-Caspian region. They are regarded as some of the most dangerous invasive species in terms of risk of arrival, establishment and detrimen...

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Main Author: LalDin, Asif
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Kingston University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.kingston.ac.uk/id/eprint/37315/
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spelling ftunivkingston:oai:eprints.kingston.ac.uk:37315 2023-05-15T13:33:24+02:00 The development and application of molecular tools to differentiate 'Dreissena' species LalDin, Asif 2016 https://eprints.kingston.ac.uk/id/eprint/37315/ unknown Kingston University LalDin, Asif (2016) The development and application of molecular tools to differentiate 'Dreissena' species. (MSc(R) thesis), Kingston University, . Biological sciences Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2016 ftunivkingston 2022-06-23T22:26:52Z 'Dreissena polymorpha' (Pallas 1771) and 'Dreissena bugensis' (Andrusov, 1897) are two species of invasive mollusc bivalves native to the Ponto-Caspian region. They are regarded as some of the most dangerous invasive species in terms of risk of arrival, establishment and detrimental ecological effects. The extent of the species' invasion is largely unprecedented with all continents except Antarctica affected. The United Kingdom has been invaded 'D. polymorpha' which was first recorded in 1824 at the Surrey docks in London and 'D.bugensis' thought to have invaded more recently. Since their arrival the species have placed an immense strain on freshwater ecosystems resulting in significant economic and ecological damage. Species assignment and identification has been a contentious matter with many conflicting reports. Over the last 25 years more focus has been placed on molecular methods of identification as opposed to traditional methods relying heavily on morphological characteristics. Despite extensive work on populations in mainland Europe and North America there no detailed studies on the molecular identification or variation of 'Dreissena' int he UK. Molecular data generated from several sites across London have indicated that that morphological identification of these organisms is largely inaccurate. By using a combination of markers the mitochondrial COI and the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed region it has been possible to accurately identify 'D.polymorpha' and 'D.bugensis'. Using this approach has not only allowed improved resolution in mussel identification but has also identified the first putative hybrids between 'D.polymorpha' as well as 'D.bugensis', further complicating their taxonomy. The accurate identification of both species allowed for analysis of population genetic structure with local populations; a task not yet undertaken. Thesis Antarc* Antarctica Kingston University London: Research Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Kingston University London: Research Repository
op_collection_id ftunivkingston
language unknown
topic Biological sciences
spellingShingle Biological sciences
LalDin, Asif
The development and application of molecular tools to differentiate 'Dreissena' species
topic_facet Biological sciences
description 'Dreissena polymorpha' (Pallas 1771) and 'Dreissena bugensis' (Andrusov, 1897) are two species of invasive mollusc bivalves native to the Ponto-Caspian region. They are regarded as some of the most dangerous invasive species in terms of risk of arrival, establishment and detrimental ecological effects. The extent of the species' invasion is largely unprecedented with all continents except Antarctica affected. The United Kingdom has been invaded 'D. polymorpha' which was first recorded in 1824 at the Surrey docks in London and 'D.bugensis' thought to have invaded more recently. Since their arrival the species have placed an immense strain on freshwater ecosystems resulting in significant economic and ecological damage. Species assignment and identification has been a contentious matter with many conflicting reports. Over the last 25 years more focus has been placed on molecular methods of identification as opposed to traditional methods relying heavily on morphological characteristics. Despite extensive work on populations in mainland Europe and North America there no detailed studies on the molecular identification or variation of 'Dreissena' int he UK. Molecular data generated from several sites across London have indicated that that morphological identification of these organisms is largely inaccurate. By using a combination of markers the mitochondrial COI and the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed region it has been possible to accurately identify 'D.polymorpha' and 'D.bugensis'. Using this approach has not only allowed improved resolution in mussel identification but has also identified the first putative hybrids between 'D.polymorpha' as well as 'D.bugensis', further complicating their taxonomy. The accurate identification of both species allowed for analysis of population genetic structure with local populations; a task not yet undertaken.
format Thesis
author LalDin, Asif
author_facet LalDin, Asif
author_sort LalDin, Asif
title The development and application of molecular tools to differentiate 'Dreissena' species
title_short The development and application of molecular tools to differentiate 'Dreissena' species
title_full The development and application of molecular tools to differentiate 'Dreissena' species
title_fullStr The development and application of molecular tools to differentiate 'Dreissena' species
title_full_unstemmed The development and application of molecular tools to differentiate 'Dreissena' species
title_sort development and application of molecular tools to differentiate 'dreissena' species
publisher Kingston University
publishDate 2016
url https://eprints.kingston.ac.uk/id/eprint/37315/
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation LalDin, Asif (2016) The development and application of molecular tools to differentiate 'Dreissena' species. (MSc(R) thesis), Kingston University, .
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