39 research outputs found
Nature and origins of unique high diversity reef faunas in the Bay of Tomini, Central Sulawesi: the ultimate "Centre of Diversity"?
The staghorn corals (Acropora spp.) of the Bay of Tomini in eastern Central Sulawesi may typify the maximal marine biodiversity associated with the idea of a "centre of diversity" in the central Indo-Pacific: other faunal groups have variable diversity, but unexpected species composition. Faunal assemblages from several phyla in this bay were assessed against phylogenetic and biogeographic data and biotic and environmental parameters in order to compare several hypotheses about the origins of the unusual species composition. It was found that the Togian Islands within the bay support a fauna with strong affinities to sites in the western equatorial Pacific, in all the studied groups except Stomatopoda. Both species composition and distribution of ecological functional groups is influenced by unusually calm and oligotrophic conditions in the islands and populations within the islands have various levels of genetic connectively to populations in other parts of Sulawesi, including complete isolation of some populations. It is proposed that these islands represent lagoonal refugia from Pleistocene lowstands, with affinities to similar refugia in the western Pacific. Additionally, the bay is possibly influenced by larval distributions from the Pacific through-flow current and there is little or no influence from the Indian Ocean
Intraspecific diversity of the Cassava Green Mite Mononychellus progresivus (Acari: Tetranychidae) using comparisons of mitochondrial and nuclear ribosomal DNA sequences and cross-breeding
Evolutionary implications of mitochondrial genetic variation: mitochondrial genetic effects on OXPHOS
Analysis of mitochondrial DNA and development of PCR-based diagnostic molecular markers for Mediterranean fruit fly (Ceratitis capitata) populations
Low, but strongly structured mitochondrial DNA diversity in root knot nematodes (Meloidogyne)
Root-knot nematodes (genus Meloidogyne) have been the subject of recent and numerous studies of genetic variation because of the need to develop molecular diagnostics for the four globally distributed, parthenogenetic species that are significant agricultural pests. Our analysis of Meloidogyne mtDNA improves on previous studies: (i) by examining restriction site polymorphism among a large number of isolates also characterized for standard morphological, host range and allozyme phenotypes; (ii) by using higher resolution electrophoretic techniques; and (iii) by mapping variable restriction sites with reference to the complete nucleotide sequence. This revealed fivefold less sequence divergence (< 0.6%) between variants than estimated in previous restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) studies, but perfect correspondence between mtDNA haplotype and allozyme (esterase) phenotypes. The mtDNA variation, although limited, is strongly structured with as much divergence between two lineages of Meloidogyne arenaria as between either of these and Meloidogyne javanica. The low diversity of mtDNAs suggests that these parthenogenetic lineages arose from distinct but closely related sexual females, a pattern seen in other parthenogenetic complexes. In contrast to the concordance between mtDNA and allozyme markers, there were several discrepancies between the traditional methods of identification. We suggest that further studies of these nematodes should focus on well defined genetic groups, whether or not these coincide with existing taxonomic units
The mitochondrial genome of the mosquito Anopheles gambiae: DNA sequence, genome organization, and comparisons with mitochondrial sequences of other insects
Nature and origins of unique high diversity reef faunas in the Bay of Tomini, Central Sulawesi: the ultimate 'centre of diversity’?
The staghorn corals (Acropora spp.) of the Bay of Tomini in eastern Central Sulawesi may typify the maximal marine biodiversity associated with the idea of a "centre of diversity" in the central Indo-Pacific: other faunal groups have variable diversity, but unexpected species composition. Faunal assemblages from several phyla in this bay were assessed against phylogenetic and biogeographic data and biotic and environmental parameters in order to compare several hypotheses about the origins of the unusual species composition. It was found that the Togian Islands within the bay support a fauna with strong affinities to sites in the western equatorial Pacific, in all the studied groups except Stomatopoda. Both species composition and distribution of ecological functional groups is influenced by unusually calm and oligotrophic conditions in the islands and populations within the islands have various levels of genetic connectively to populations in other parts of Sulawesi, including complete isolation of some populations. It is proposed that these islands represent lagoonal refugia from Pleistocene lowstands, with affinities to similar refugia in the western Pacific. Additionally, the bay is possibly influenced by larval distributions from the Pacific through-flow current and there is little or no influence from the Indian Ocean
