Inconsistent estimates of diversity between traditional and DNA taxonomy in bdelloid rotifers |
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Authors: | Murat Kaya Elisabeth A. Herniou Timothy G. Barraclough |
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Affiliation: | a Division of Biology, Silwood Park Campus, Imperial College London, Ascot Berkshire SL57PY, UK b Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Ankara University, Tando?an, Ankara 06100, Turkey c Institut de Recherche sur la Biologie de l’Insecte, UMR 6035 CNRS, Université François Rabelais, 37200 Tours, France |
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Abstract: | Microscopic animals offer great potential in the analysis of spatial patterns of diversity, as they may provide different scenarios for biogeography and macroecology, but understanding diversity of microscopic animals is hampered by lack of comprehensive data on species distribution and by unreliable taxonomy. DNA taxonomy may prove useful in obtaining reliable data in the future, but we still do not know to what extent traditional and DNA taxonomy can be comparable for microscopic organisms. In this paper, we compare analyses and estimates of diversity at the level of species assemblage between traditional and DNA taxonomy for a group of moss-dwelling microscopic animals, bdelloid rotifers. The results are straightforward: Traditional species identification underestimates diversity by factors of 2 at the local and 2.5 at the regional scale. We discuss the results in the framework of current hypotheses on the distribution of microscopic animals. |
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Keywords: | Alpha-beta-gamma diversity Everything-is-everywhere hypothesis Molecular phylogeny Phylogeography Rotifera Bdelloidea Species richness |
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