IMIS | Lifewatch regional portal

You are here

IMIS

[ report an error in this record ]basket (0): add | show Print this page

DNA barcoding for species identification and discovery in diatoms
Mann, D.G.; Sato, S.; Trobajo, R.; Vanormelingen, P.; Souffreau, C. (2010). DNA barcoding for species identification and discovery in diatoms. Cryptogam., Algol. 31(4): 557-577
In: Cryptogamie. Algologie. ADAC: Paris. ISSN 0181-1568; e-ISSN 1776-0984, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Keyword
    Bacillariophyceae [WoRMS]
Author keywords
    COI; barcoding; diatoms; DNA barcodes; identification; ITS rDNA;molecular systematics; rbcL; LSU rDNA; species discovery; SSU rDNA;taxonomy

Authors  Top 
  • Mann, D.G.
  • Sato, S.
  • Trobajo, R.
  • Vanormelingen, P., more
  • Souffreau, C., more

Abstract
    Diatoms are the largest group of microalgae, play an enormous role in the biosphere, and have major significance as bioindicators. Traditional identification requires inter alia long training, considerable microscopical skill, and use of a vast and scattered literature. During the life cycle, diatom cells change in size and pattern, often also shape, but the full cycle is known in <1% of described species. Recent evidence shows that there are many pseudocryptic and cryptic species of diatoms, requiring molecular methods for discovery and recognition. These and other factors argue that DNA barcoding would be highly beneficial. It could be 'strong', resolving nearly all species, or 'weak', resolving mostly species already recognized from light microscopy. Attempts have already been made to identify suitable genes and we evaluate these on the basis of universality and practicality, and ability to discriminate between species in the very few 'model' systems offering likely examples of sister-species-pairs. No candidate marker is ideal but LSU rDNA and rbcL may be acceptable, though their discriminatory power is lower than that of some other markers. We discuss the next steps in developing a full barcode system.

All data in the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) is subject to the VLIZ privacy policy Top | Authors