Where taxonomy based on subtle morphological differences is perfectly mirrored by huge genetic distances: DNA barcoding in Protura (Hexapoda).

<h4>Background</h4>Protura is a group of tiny, primarily wingless hexapods living in soil habitats. Presently about 800 valid species are known. Diagnostic characters are very inconspicuous and difficult to recognize. Therefore taxonomic work constitutes an extraordinary challenge which...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Monika Carol Resch, Julia Shrubovych, Daniela Bartel, Nikolaus U Szucsich, Gerald Timelthaler, Yun Bu, Manfred Walzl, Günther Pass
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0090653&type=printable
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849722186462396416
author Monika Carol Resch
Julia Shrubovych
Daniela Bartel
Nikolaus U Szucsich
Gerald Timelthaler
Yun Bu
Manfred Walzl
Günther Pass
author_facet Monika Carol Resch
Julia Shrubovych
Daniela Bartel
Nikolaus U Szucsich
Gerald Timelthaler
Yun Bu
Manfred Walzl
Günther Pass
author_sort Monika Carol Resch
collection DOAJ
description <h4>Background</h4>Protura is a group of tiny, primarily wingless hexapods living in soil habitats. Presently about 800 valid species are known. Diagnostic characters are very inconspicuous and difficult to recognize. Therefore taxonomic work constitutes an extraordinary challenge which requires special skills and experience. Aim of the present pilot project was to examine if DNA barcoding can be a useful additional approach for delimiting and determining proturan species.<h4>Methodology and principal findings</h4>The study was performed on 103 proturan specimens, collected primarily in Austria, with additional samples from China and Japan. The animals were examined with two markers, the DNA barcoding region of the mitochondrial COI gene and a fragment of the nuclear 28S rDNA (Divergent Domain 2 and 3). Due to the minuteness of Protura a modified non-destructive DNA-extraction method was used which enables subsequent species determination. Both markers separated the examined proturans into highly congruent well supported clusters. Species determination was performed without knowledge of the results of the molecular analyses. The investigated specimens comprise a total of 16 species belonging to 8 genera. Remarkably, morphological determination in all species exactly mirrors molecular clusters. The investigation revealed unusually huge genetic COI distances among the investigated proturans, both maximal intraspecific distances (0-21.3%), as well as maximal congeneric interspecifical distances (up to 44.7%).<h4>Conclusions</h4>The study clearly demonstrates that the tricky morphological taxonomy in Protura has a solid biological background and that accurate species delimitation is possible using both markers, COI and 28S rDNA. The fact that both molecular and morphological analyses can be performed on the same individual will be of great importance for the description of new species and offers a valuable new tool for biological and ecological studies, in which proturans have generally remained undetermined at species level.
format Article
id doaj-art-8f7539ec22e3455c80adab841b2133df
institution DOAJ
issn 1932-6203
language English
publishDate 2014-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj-art-8f7539ec22e3455c80adab841b2133df2025-08-20T03:11:25ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0193e9065310.1371/journal.pone.0090653Where taxonomy based on subtle morphological differences is perfectly mirrored by huge genetic distances: DNA barcoding in Protura (Hexapoda).Monika Carol ReschJulia ShrubovychDaniela BartelNikolaus U SzucsichGerald TimelthalerYun BuManfred WalzlGünther Pass<h4>Background</h4>Protura is a group of tiny, primarily wingless hexapods living in soil habitats. Presently about 800 valid species are known. Diagnostic characters are very inconspicuous and difficult to recognize. Therefore taxonomic work constitutes an extraordinary challenge which requires special skills and experience. Aim of the present pilot project was to examine if DNA barcoding can be a useful additional approach for delimiting and determining proturan species.<h4>Methodology and principal findings</h4>The study was performed on 103 proturan specimens, collected primarily in Austria, with additional samples from China and Japan. The animals were examined with two markers, the DNA barcoding region of the mitochondrial COI gene and a fragment of the nuclear 28S rDNA (Divergent Domain 2 and 3). Due to the minuteness of Protura a modified non-destructive DNA-extraction method was used which enables subsequent species determination. Both markers separated the examined proturans into highly congruent well supported clusters. Species determination was performed without knowledge of the results of the molecular analyses. The investigated specimens comprise a total of 16 species belonging to 8 genera. Remarkably, morphological determination in all species exactly mirrors molecular clusters. The investigation revealed unusually huge genetic COI distances among the investigated proturans, both maximal intraspecific distances (0-21.3%), as well as maximal congeneric interspecifical distances (up to 44.7%).<h4>Conclusions</h4>The study clearly demonstrates that the tricky morphological taxonomy in Protura has a solid biological background and that accurate species delimitation is possible using both markers, COI and 28S rDNA. The fact that both molecular and morphological analyses can be performed on the same individual will be of great importance for the description of new species and offers a valuable new tool for biological and ecological studies, in which proturans have generally remained undetermined at species level.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0090653&type=printable
spellingShingle Monika Carol Resch
Julia Shrubovych
Daniela Bartel
Nikolaus U Szucsich
Gerald Timelthaler
Yun Bu
Manfred Walzl
Günther Pass
Where taxonomy based on subtle morphological differences is perfectly mirrored by huge genetic distances: DNA barcoding in Protura (Hexapoda).
PLoS ONE
title Where taxonomy based on subtle morphological differences is perfectly mirrored by huge genetic distances: DNA barcoding in Protura (Hexapoda).
title_full Where taxonomy based on subtle morphological differences is perfectly mirrored by huge genetic distances: DNA barcoding in Protura (Hexapoda).
title_fullStr Where taxonomy based on subtle morphological differences is perfectly mirrored by huge genetic distances: DNA barcoding in Protura (Hexapoda).
title_full_unstemmed Where taxonomy based on subtle morphological differences is perfectly mirrored by huge genetic distances: DNA barcoding in Protura (Hexapoda).
title_short Where taxonomy based on subtle morphological differences is perfectly mirrored by huge genetic distances: DNA barcoding in Protura (Hexapoda).
title_sort where taxonomy based on subtle morphological differences is perfectly mirrored by huge genetic distances dna barcoding in protura hexapoda
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0090653&type=printable
work_keys_str_mv AT monikacarolresch wheretaxonomybasedonsubtlemorphologicaldifferencesisperfectlymirroredbyhugegeneticdistancesdnabarcodinginproturahexapoda
AT juliashrubovych wheretaxonomybasedonsubtlemorphologicaldifferencesisperfectlymirroredbyhugegeneticdistancesdnabarcodinginproturahexapoda
AT danielabartel wheretaxonomybasedonsubtlemorphologicaldifferencesisperfectlymirroredbyhugegeneticdistancesdnabarcodinginproturahexapoda
AT nikolaususzucsich wheretaxonomybasedonsubtlemorphologicaldifferencesisperfectlymirroredbyhugegeneticdistancesdnabarcodinginproturahexapoda
AT geraldtimelthaler wheretaxonomybasedonsubtlemorphologicaldifferencesisperfectlymirroredbyhugegeneticdistancesdnabarcodinginproturahexapoda
AT yunbu wheretaxonomybasedonsubtlemorphologicaldifferencesisperfectlymirroredbyhugegeneticdistancesdnabarcodinginproturahexapoda
AT manfredwalzl wheretaxonomybasedonsubtlemorphologicaldifferencesisperfectlymirroredbyhugegeneticdistancesdnabarcodinginproturahexapoda
AT guntherpass wheretaxonomybasedonsubtlemorphologicaldifferencesisperfectlymirroredbyhugegeneticdistancesdnabarcodinginproturahexapoda