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Underestimation of Species Richness in Neotropical Frogs Revealed by mtDNA Analyses

BACKGROUND: Amphibians are rapidly vanishing. At the same time, it is most likely that the number of amphibian species is highly underestimated. Recent DNA barcoding work has attempted to define a threshold between intra- and inter-specific genetic distances to help identify candidate species. In gr...

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Autores principales: Fouquet, Antoine, Gilles, André, Vences, Miguel, Marty, Christian, Blanc, Michel, Gemmell, Neil J.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2040503/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17971872
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001109
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author Fouquet, Antoine
Gilles, André
Vences, Miguel
Marty, Christian
Blanc, Michel
Gemmell, Neil J.
author_facet Fouquet, Antoine
Gilles, André
Vences, Miguel
Marty, Christian
Blanc, Michel
Gemmell, Neil J.
author_sort Fouquet, Antoine
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Amphibians are rapidly vanishing. At the same time, it is most likely that the number of amphibian species is highly underestimated. Recent DNA barcoding work has attempted to define a threshold between intra- and inter-specific genetic distances to help identify candidate species. In groups with high extinction rates and poorly known species boundaries, like amphibians, such tools may provide a way to rapidly evaluate species richness. METHODOLOGY: Here we analyse published and new 16S rDNA sequences from 60 frog species of Amazonia-Guianas to obtain a minimum estimate of the number of undescribed species in this region. We combined isolation by distance, phylogenetic analyses, and comparison of molecular distances to evaluate threshold values for the identification of candidate species among these frogs. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In most cases, geographically distant populations belong to genetically highly distinct lineages that could be considered as candidate new species. This was not universal among the taxa studied and thus widespread species of Neotropical frogs really do exist, contrary to previous assumptions. Moreover, the many instances of paraphyly and the wide overlap between distributions of inter- and intra-specific distances reinforce the hypothesis that many cryptic species remain to be described. In our data set, pairwise genetic distances below 0.02 are strongly correlated with geographical distances. This correlation remains statistically significant until genetic distance is 0.05, with no such relation thereafter. This suggests that for higher distances allopatric and sympatric cryptic species prevail. Based on our analyses, we propose a more inclusive pairwise genetic distance of 0.03 between taxa to target lineages that could correspond to candidate species. CONCLUSIONS: Using this approach, we identify 129 candidate species, two-fold greater than the 60 species included in the current study. This leads to estimates of around 170 to 460 frog taxa unrecognized in Amazonia-Guianas. SIGNIFICANCE: As a consequence the global amphibian decline detected especially in the Neotropics may be worse than realised.
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spelling pubmed-20405032007-10-31 Underestimation of Species Richness in Neotropical Frogs Revealed by mtDNA Analyses Fouquet, Antoine Gilles, André Vences, Miguel Marty, Christian Blanc, Michel Gemmell, Neil J. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Amphibians are rapidly vanishing. At the same time, it is most likely that the number of amphibian species is highly underestimated. Recent DNA barcoding work has attempted to define a threshold between intra- and inter-specific genetic distances to help identify candidate species. In groups with high extinction rates and poorly known species boundaries, like amphibians, such tools may provide a way to rapidly evaluate species richness. METHODOLOGY: Here we analyse published and new 16S rDNA sequences from 60 frog species of Amazonia-Guianas to obtain a minimum estimate of the number of undescribed species in this region. We combined isolation by distance, phylogenetic analyses, and comparison of molecular distances to evaluate threshold values for the identification of candidate species among these frogs. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In most cases, geographically distant populations belong to genetically highly distinct lineages that could be considered as candidate new species. This was not universal among the taxa studied and thus widespread species of Neotropical frogs really do exist, contrary to previous assumptions. Moreover, the many instances of paraphyly and the wide overlap between distributions of inter- and intra-specific distances reinforce the hypothesis that many cryptic species remain to be described. In our data set, pairwise genetic distances below 0.02 are strongly correlated with geographical distances. This correlation remains statistically significant until genetic distance is 0.05, with no such relation thereafter. This suggests that for higher distances allopatric and sympatric cryptic species prevail. Based on our analyses, we propose a more inclusive pairwise genetic distance of 0.03 between taxa to target lineages that could correspond to candidate species. CONCLUSIONS: Using this approach, we identify 129 candidate species, two-fold greater than the 60 species included in the current study. This leads to estimates of around 170 to 460 frog taxa unrecognized in Amazonia-Guianas. SIGNIFICANCE: As a consequence the global amphibian decline detected especially in the Neotropics may be worse than realised. Public Library of Science 2007-10-31 /pmc/articles/PMC2040503/ /pubmed/17971872 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001109 Text en Fouquet et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fouquet, Antoine
Gilles, André
Vences, Miguel
Marty, Christian
Blanc, Michel
Gemmell, Neil J.
Underestimation of Species Richness in Neotropical Frogs Revealed by mtDNA Analyses
title Underestimation of Species Richness in Neotropical Frogs Revealed by mtDNA Analyses
title_full Underestimation of Species Richness in Neotropical Frogs Revealed by mtDNA Analyses
title_fullStr Underestimation of Species Richness in Neotropical Frogs Revealed by mtDNA Analyses
title_full_unstemmed Underestimation of Species Richness in Neotropical Frogs Revealed by mtDNA Analyses
title_short Underestimation of Species Richness in Neotropical Frogs Revealed by mtDNA Analyses
title_sort underestimation of species richness in neotropical frogs revealed by mtdna analyses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2040503/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17971872
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001109
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