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Genetics and Genomics Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

City University of New York (CUNY)

Series

2017

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Genetics and Genomics

Cryptic Diversity And Discordance In Single‐Locus Species Delimitation Methods Within Horned Lizards (Phrynosomatidae: Phrynosoma), Christopher Blair, Robert W. Bryson Jr. Nov 2017

Cryptic Diversity And Discordance In Single‐Locus Species Delimitation Methods Within Horned Lizards (Phrynosomatidae: Phrynosoma), Christopher Blair, Robert W. Bryson Jr.

Publications and Research

Biodiversity reduction and loss continues to progress at an alarming rate, and thus there is widespread interest in utilizing rapid and efficient methods for quantifying and delimiting taxonomic diversity. Single-locus species-delimitation methods have become popular, in part due to the adoption of the DNA barcoding paradigm. These techniques can be broadly classified into tree-based and distance-based methods depending on whether species are delimited based on a constructed genealogy. Although the relative performance of these methods has been tested repeatedly with simulations, additional studies are needed to assess congruence with empirical data. We compiled a large data set of mitochondrial ND4 …


Large-Scale Differences In Microbial Biodiversity Discovery Between 16s Amplicon And Shotgun Sequencing, Michael Tessler, Johannes S. Neumann, Ebrahim Afshinnekoo, Michael Pineda, Rebecca Hersch, Luiz Felipe M. Velgo, Bianca T. Segovia, Fabio A. Lansac-Toha, Michael Lemke, Rob Desalle, Christopher E. Mason, Mercer R. Brugler Jul 2017

Large-Scale Differences In Microbial Biodiversity Discovery Between 16s Amplicon And Shotgun Sequencing, Michael Tessler, Johannes S. Neumann, Ebrahim Afshinnekoo, Michael Pineda, Rebecca Hersch, Luiz Felipe M. Velgo, Bianca T. Segovia, Fabio A. Lansac-Toha, Michael Lemke, Rob Desalle, Christopher E. Mason, Mercer R. Brugler

Publications and Research

Modern metagenomic environmental DNA studies are almost completely reliant on next-generation sequencing, making evaluations of these methods critical. We compare two next-generation sequencing techniques – amplicon and shotgun – on water samples across four of Brazil’s major river floodplain systems (Amazon, Araguaia, Paraná, and Pantanal). Less than 50% of phyla identified via amplicon sequencing were recovered from shotgun sequencing, clearly challenging the dogma that mid-depth shotgun recovers more diversity than amplicon-based approaches. Amplicon sequencing also revealed ~27% more families. Overall the amplicon data were more robust across both biodiversity and community ecology analyses at different taxonomic scales. Our work doubles …