Barcoding and Phylogenetic Inferences in Nine Mugilid Species (Pisces, Mugiliformes)

Accurate identification of fish and fish products, from eggs to adults, is important in many areas. Grey mullets of the family Mugilidae are distributed worldwide and inhabit marine, estuarine, and freshwater environments in all tropical and temperate regions. Various Mugilid species are commerciall...

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Main Authors: Neonila Polyakova, Alisa Boutin, Vladimir Brykov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Society of Systematic Zoology 2013-10-01
Series:Animal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity
Subjects:
COI
RHO
Online Access:http://www.e-ased.org/Upload/files/e-ased.org/02-Barcoding(13-0011).142338.pdf
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spelling doaj-a27097db2d2c4bd6884ea7b1ea842e1c2020-11-25T00:46:01ZengKorean Society of Systematic ZoologyAnimal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity2234-69532234-81902013-10-01294272278http://dx.doi.org/10.5635/ASED.2013.29.4.272Barcoding and Phylogenetic Inferences in Nine Mugilid Species (Pisces, Mugiliformes)Neonila PolyakovaAlisa BoutinVladimir BrykovAccurate identification of fish and fish products, from eggs to adults, is important in many areas. Grey mullets of the family Mugilidae are distributed worldwide and inhabit marine, estuarine, and freshwater environments in all tropical and temperate regions. Various Mugilid species are commercially important species in fishery and aquaculture of many countries. For the present study we have chosen two Mugilid genes with different phylogenetic signals: relatively variable mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) and conservative nuclear rhodopsin (RHO). We examined their diversity within and among 9 Mugilid species belonging to 4 genera, many of which have been examined from multiple specimens, with the goal of determining whether DNA barcoding can achieve unambiguous species recognition of Mugilid species. The data obtained showed that information based on COI sequences was diagnostic not only for species-level identification but also for recognition of intraspecific units, e.g., allopatric populations of circumtropical Mugil cephalus, or even native and acclimatized specimens of Chelon haematocheila. All RHO sequences appeared strictly species specific. Based on the data obtained, we conclude that COI, as well as RHO sequencing can be used to unambiguously identify fish species. Topologies of phylogeny based on RHO and COI sequences coincided with each other, while together they had a good phylogenetic signal.http://www.e-ased.org/Upload/files/e-ased.org/02-Barcoding(13-0011).142338.pdfMugilidaephylogenetic relationshipsbarcodingCOIRHO
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Neonila Polyakova
Alisa Boutin
Vladimir Brykov
spellingShingle Neonila Polyakova
Alisa Boutin
Vladimir Brykov
Barcoding and Phylogenetic Inferences in Nine Mugilid Species (Pisces, Mugiliformes)
Animal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity
Mugilidae
phylogenetic relationships
barcoding
COI
RHO
author_facet Neonila Polyakova
Alisa Boutin
Vladimir Brykov
author_sort Neonila Polyakova
title Barcoding and Phylogenetic Inferences in Nine Mugilid Species (Pisces, Mugiliformes)
title_short Barcoding and Phylogenetic Inferences in Nine Mugilid Species (Pisces, Mugiliformes)
title_full Barcoding and Phylogenetic Inferences in Nine Mugilid Species (Pisces, Mugiliformes)
title_fullStr Barcoding and Phylogenetic Inferences in Nine Mugilid Species (Pisces, Mugiliformes)
title_full_unstemmed Barcoding and Phylogenetic Inferences in Nine Mugilid Species (Pisces, Mugiliformes)
title_sort barcoding and phylogenetic inferences in nine mugilid species (pisces, mugiliformes)
publisher Korean Society of Systematic Zoology
series Animal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity
issn 2234-6953
2234-8190
publishDate 2013-10-01
description Accurate identification of fish and fish products, from eggs to adults, is important in many areas. Grey mullets of the family Mugilidae are distributed worldwide and inhabit marine, estuarine, and freshwater environments in all tropical and temperate regions. Various Mugilid species are commercially important species in fishery and aquaculture of many countries. For the present study we have chosen two Mugilid genes with different phylogenetic signals: relatively variable mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) and conservative nuclear rhodopsin (RHO). We examined their diversity within and among 9 Mugilid species belonging to 4 genera, many of which have been examined from multiple specimens, with the goal of determining whether DNA barcoding can achieve unambiguous species recognition of Mugilid species. The data obtained showed that information based on COI sequences was diagnostic not only for species-level identification but also for recognition of intraspecific units, e.g., allopatric populations of circumtropical Mugil cephalus, or even native and acclimatized specimens of Chelon haematocheila. All RHO sequences appeared strictly species specific. Based on the data obtained, we conclude that COI, as well as RHO sequencing can be used to unambiguously identify fish species. Topologies of phylogeny based on RHO and COI sequences coincided with each other, while together they had a good phylogenetic signal.
topic Mugilidae
phylogenetic relationships
barcoding
COI
RHO
url http://www.e-ased.org/Upload/files/e-ased.org/02-Barcoding(13-0011).142338.pdf
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