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Using DNA barcodes for assessing diversity in the family Hybotidae (Diptera, Empidoidea)

Abstract. Empidoidea is one of the largest extant lineages of flies, but phylogenetic relationships among species of this group are poorly investigated and global diversity remains scarcely assessed. In this context, one of the most enigmatic empidoid families is Hybotidae. Within the framework of a...

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Autores principales: Nagy, Zoltán T., Sonet, Gontran, Mortelmans, Jonas, Vandewynkel, Camille, Grootaert, Patrick
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Pensoft Publishers 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3890682/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24453562
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.365.6070
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author Nagy, Zoltán T.
Sonet, Gontran
Mortelmans, Jonas
Vandewynkel, Camille
Grootaert, Patrick
author_facet Nagy, Zoltán T.
Sonet, Gontran
Mortelmans, Jonas
Vandewynkel, Camille
Grootaert, Patrick
author_sort Nagy, Zoltán T.
collection PubMed
description Abstract. Empidoidea is one of the largest extant lineages of flies, but phylogenetic relationships among species of this group are poorly investigated and global diversity remains scarcely assessed. In this context, one of the most enigmatic empidoid families is Hybotidae. Within the framework of a pilot study, we barcoded 339 specimens of Old World hybotids belonging to 164 species and 22 genera (plus two Empis as outgroups) and attempted to evaluate whether patterns of intra- and interspecific divergences match the current taxonomy. We used a large sampling of diverse Hybotidae. The material came from the Palaearctic (Belgium, France, Portugal and Russian Caucasus), the Afrotropic (Democratic Republic of the Congo) and the Oriental realms (Singapore and Thailand). Thereby, we optimized lab protocols for barcoding hybotids. Although DNA barcodes generally well distinguished recognized taxa, the study also revealed a number of unexpected phenomena: e.g., undescribed taxa found within morphologically very similar or identical specimens, especially when geographic distance was large; some morphologically distinct species showed no genetic divergence; or different pattern of intraspecific divergence between populations or closely related species. Using COI sequences and simple Neighbour-Joining tree reconstructions, the monophyly of many species- and genus-level taxa was well supported, but more inclusive taxonomical levels did not receive significant bootstrap support. We conclude that in hybotids DNA barcoding might be well used to identify species, when two main constraints are considered. First, incomplete barcoding libraries hinder efficient (correct) identification. Therefore, extra efforts are needed to increase the representation of hybotids in these databases. Second, the spatial scale of sampling has to be taken into account, and especially for widespread species or species complexes with unclear taxonomy, an integrative approach has to be used to clarify species boundaries and identities.
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spelling pubmed-38906822014-01-16 Using DNA barcodes for assessing diversity in the family Hybotidae (Diptera, Empidoidea) Nagy, Zoltán T. Sonet, Gontran Mortelmans, Jonas Vandewynkel, Camille Grootaert, Patrick Zookeys Article Abstract. Empidoidea is one of the largest extant lineages of flies, but phylogenetic relationships among species of this group are poorly investigated and global diversity remains scarcely assessed. In this context, one of the most enigmatic empidoid families is Hybotidae. Within the framework of a pilot study, we barcoded 339 specimens of Old World hybotids belonging to 164 species and 22 genera (plus two Empis as outgroups) and attempted to evaluate whether patterns of intra- and interspecific divergences match the current taxonomy. We used a large sampling of diverse Hybotidae. The material came from the Palaearctic (Belgium, France, Portugal and Russian Caucasus), the Afrotropic (Democratic Republic of the Congo) and the Oriental realms (Singapore and Thailand). Thereby, we optimized lab protocols for barcoding hybotids. Although DNA barcodes generally well distinguished recognized taxa, the study also revealed a number of unexpected phenomena: e.g., undescribed taxa found within morphologically very similar or identical specimens, especially when geographic distance was large; some morphologically distinct species showed no genetic divergence; or different pattern of intraspecific divergence between populations or closely related species. Using COI sequences and simple Neighbour-Joining tree reconstructions, the monophyly of many species- and genus-level taxa was well supported, but more inclusive taxonomical levels did not receive significant bootstrap support. We conclude that in hybotids DNA barcoding might be well used to identify species, when two main constraints are considered. First, incomplete barcoding libraries hinder efficient (correct) identification. Therefore, extra efforts are needed to increase the representation of hybotids in these databases. Second, the spatial scale of sampling has to be taken into account, and especially for widespread species or species complexes with unclear taxonomy, an integrative approach has to be used to clarify species boundaries and identities. Pensoft Publishers 2013-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3890682/ /pubmed/24453562 http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.365.6070 Text en Zoltán T. Nagy, Gontran Sonet, Jonas Mortelmans, Camille Vandewynkel, Patrick Grootaert http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Article
Nagy, Zoltán T.
Sonet, Gontran
Mortelmans, Jonas
Vandewynkel, Camille
Grootaert, Patrick
Using DNA barcodes for assessing diversity in the family Hybotidae (Diptera, Empidoidea)
title Using DNA barcodes for assessing diversity in the family Hybotidae (Diptera, Empidoidea)
title_full Using DNA barcodes for assessing diversity in the family Hybotidae (Diptera, Empidoidea)
title_fullStr Using DNA barcodes for assessing diversity in the family Hybotidae (Diptera, Empidoidea)
title_full_unstemmed Using DNA barcodes for assessing diversity in the family Hybotidae (Diptera, Empidoidea)
title_short Using DNA barcodes for assessing diversity in the family Hybotidae (Diptera, Empidoidea)
title_sort using dna barcodes for assessing diversity in the family hybotidae (diptera, empidoidea)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3890682/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24453562
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.365.6070
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