Publication | Closed Access
A minimalist barcode can identify a specimen whose DNA is degraded
544
Citations
17
References
2006
Year
Animal TaxonomyGeneticsDna AnalysisGenomicsDna BarcodingPhylogenetic AnalysisPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyWasp Museum SpecimensMinimalist BarcodeMolecular DiagnosticsCriminal Dna DatabaseDna SequencingDna ReplicationStatistical GeneticsGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsBioinformaticsDna DegradationBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyForensic IdentificationMedicineDna Barcode
Abstract A DNA barcode based on 650 bp of mitochondrial gene cytochrome c oxidase I is proving to be highly functional in species identification for various animal groups. However, DNA degradation complicates the recovery of a full‐length barcode from many museum specimens. Here we explore the use of shorter barcode sequences for identification of such specimens. We recovered short sequences — i.e. ∼100 bp — with a single PCR pass from more than 90% of the specimens in assemblages of moth and wasp museum specimens from which full barcode recovery was only 50%, and the latter were usually less than 8 years old. Short barcodes were effective in identifying specimens, confirming their utility in circumstances where full barcodes are too expensive to obtain and the identification comparisons are within a confined taxonomic group.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1