The use of PCR-RFLP to genetically distinguish the morphologically close species: Ceriodaphnia dubia Richard, 1894 and Ceriodaphnia silvestrii Daday, 1902 (Crustacea Cladocera)

The cladocerans are important components of planktonic and benthic freshwater and good indicators of the trophic state of water bodies. The morphological taxonomy of many species of Cladocera is considered complex with minor differences separating some species. Nowadays, molecular techniques provide a powerful tool to identify and classify different taxonomical levels, using mainly ribosomal RNA genes (rRNA) as molecular markers. In the present work we performed PCR-RFLP to separate Ceriodaphnia dubia, an exotic species in Brazil and the native species Ceriodaphnia silvestrii, widely distributed in Brazilian freshwater. The RFLP analysis of the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region of rRNA genes showed to be different between C. dubia and C. silvestrii when using enzymes EcoRI, ApaI and SalI. Thus, the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region proved to be a useful molecular marker to differentiate the studied Ceriodaphnia species, which makes the task easier of telling apart species that are morphologically very similar. Also, this methodology might be interesting in determining the distribution of the exotic species C. dubia in Brazilian freshwaters, particularly in cases when C. dubia occurs in the absence of C. silvestrii, a particularly difficult task for ecologists who are not taxonomy specialists.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Abreu,MJ., Santos-Wisniewski,MJ., Rocha,O., Orlando,TC.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Instituto Internacional de Ecologia 2010
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842010000100016
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:scielo:S1519-69842010000100016
record_format ojs
spelling oai:scielo:S1519-698420100001000162010-03-04The use of PCR-RFLP to genetically distinguish the morphologically close species: Ceriodaphnia dubia Richard, 1894 and Ceriodaphnia silvestrii Daday, 1902 (Crustacea Cladocera)Abreu,MJ.Santos-Wisniewski,MJ.Rocha,O.Orlando,TC. molecular markers Cladocera exotic species DNA extraction spacer regions The cladocerans are important components of planktonic and benthic freshwater and good indicators of the trophic state of water bodies. The morphological taxonomy of many species of Cladocera is considered complex with minor differences separating some species. Nowadays, molecular techniques provide a powerful tool to identify and classify different taxonomical levels, using mainly ribosomal RNA genes (rRNA) as molecular markers. In the present work we performed PCR-RFLP to separate Ceriodaphnia dubia, an exotic species in Brazil and the native species Ceriodaphnia silvestrii, widely distributed in Brazilian freshwater. The RFLP analysis of the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region of rRNA genes showed to be different between C. dubia and C. silvestrii when using enzymes EcoRI, ApaI and SalI. Thus, the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region proved to be a useful molecular marker to differentiate the studied Ceriodaphnia species, which makes the task easier of telling apart species that are morphologically very similar. Also, this methodology might be interesting in determining the distribution of the exotic species C. dubia in Brazilian freshwaters, particularly in cases when C. dubia occurs in the absence of C. silvestrii, a particularly difficult task for ecologists who are not taxonomy specialists.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInstituto Internacional de EcologiaBrazilian Journal of Biology v.70 n.1 20102010-02-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842010000100016en10.1590/S1519-69842010000100016
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Abreu,MJ.
Santos-Wisniewski,MJ.
Rocha,O.
Orlando,TC.
spellingShingle Abreu,MJ.
Santos-Wisniewski,MJ.
Rocha,O.
Orlando,TC.
The use of PCR-RFLP to genetically distinguish the morphologically close species: Ceriodaphnia dubia Richard, 1894 and Ceriodaphnia silvestrii Daday, 1902 (Crustacea Cladocera)
author_facet Abreu,MJ.
Santos-Wisniewski,MJ.
Rocha,O.
Orlando,TC.
author_sort Abreu,MJ.
title The use of PCR-RFLP to genetically distinguish the morphologically close species: Ceriodaphnia dubia Richard, 1894 and Ceriodaphnia silvestrii Daday, 1902 (Crustacea Cladocera)
title_short The use of PCR-RFLP to genetically distinguish the morphologically close species: Ceriodaphnia dubia Richard, 1894 and Ceriodaphnia silvestrii Daday, 1902 (Crustacea Cladocera)
title_full The use of PCR-RFLP to genetically distinguish the morphologically close species: Ceriodaphnia dubia Richard, 1894 and Ceriodaphnia silvestrii Daday, 1902 (Crustacea Cladocera)
title_fullStr The use of PCR-RFLP to genetically distinguish the morphologically close species: Ceriodaphnia dubia Richard, 1894 and Ceriodaphnia silvestrii Daday, 1902 (Crustacea Cladocera)
title_full_unstemmed The use of PCR-RFLP to genetically distinguish the morphologically close species: Ceriodaphnia dubia Richard, 1894 and Ceriodaphnia silvestrii Daday, 1902 (Crustacea Cladocera)
title_sort use of pcr-rflp to genetically distinguish the morphologically close species: ceriodaphnia dubia richard, 1894 and ceriodaphnia silvestrii daday, 1902 (crustacea cladocera)
description The cladocerans are important components of planktonic and benthic freshwater and good indicators of the trophic state of water bodies. The morphological taxonomy of many species of Cladocera is considered complex with minor differences separating some species. Nowadays, molecular techniques provide a powerful tool to identify and classify different taxonomical levels, using mainly ribosomal RNA genes (rRNA) as molecular markers. In the present work we performed PCR-RFLP to separate Ceriodaphnia dubia, an exotic species in Brazil and the native species Ceriodaphnia silvestrii, widely distributed in Brazilian freshwater. The RFLP analysis of the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region of rRNA genes showed to be different between C. dubia and C. silvestrii when using enzymes EcoRI, ApaI and SalI. Thus, the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region proved to be a useful molecular marker to differentiate the studied Ceriodaphnia species, which makes the task easier of telling apart species that are morphologically very similar. Also, this methodology might be interesting in determining the distribution of the exotic species C. dubia in Brazilian freshwaters, particularly in cases when C. dubia occurs in the absence of C. silvestrii, a particularly difficult task for ecologists who are not taxonomy specialists.
publisher Instituto Internacional de Ecologia
publishDate 2010
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842010000100016
work_keys_str_mv AT abreumj theuseofpcrrflptogeneticallydistinguishthemorphologicallyclosespeciesceriodaphniadubiarichard1894andceriodaphniasilvestriidaday1902crustaceacladocera
AT santoswisniewskimj theuseofpcrrflptogeneticallydistinguishthemorphologicallyclosespeciesceriodaphniadubiarichard1894andceriodaphniasilvestriidaday1902crustaceacladocera
AT rochao theuseofpcrrflptogeneticallydistinguishthemorphologicallyclosespeciesceriodaphniadubiarichard1894andceriodaphniasilvestriidaday1902crustaceacladocera
AT orlandotc theuseofpcrrflptogeneticallydistinguishthemorphologicallyclosespeciesceriodaphniadubiarichard1894andceriodaphniasilvestriidaday1902crustaceacladocera
AT abreumj useofpcrrflptogeneticallydistinguishthemorphologicallyclosespeciesceriodaphniadubiarichard1894andceriodaphniasilvestriidaday1902crustaceacladocera
AT santoswisniewskimj useofpcrrflptogeneticallydistinguishthemorphologicallyclosespeciesceriodaphniadubiarichard1894andceriodaphniasilvestriidaday1902crustaceacladocera
AT rochao useofpcrrflptogeneticallydistinguishthemorphologicallyclosespeciesceriodaphniadubiarichard1894andceriodaphniasilvestriidaday1902crustaceacladocera
AT orlandotc useofpcrrflptogeneticallydistinguishthemorphologicallyclosespeciesceriodaphniadubiarichard1894andceriodaphniasilvestriidaday1902crustaceacladocera
_version_ 1756426448786161664