Most work on plant community ecology has been performed above ground, neglecting the processes that occur in the soil. DNA metabarcoding, in which multiple species are computationally identified in bulk samples, can help to overcome the logistical limitations involved in sampling plant communities belowground. However, a major limitation of this methodology is the quantification of species' abundances based on the percentage of sequences assigned to each taxon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFeather mites are among the most common and diverse ectosymbionts of birds, yet basic questions such as the nature of their relationship remain largely unanswered. One reason for feather mites being understudied is that their morphological identification is often virtually impossible when using female or young individuals. Even for adult male specimens this task is tedious and requires advanced taxonomic expertise, thus hampering large-scale studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe assembled and annotated the complete mitochondrial genome of , the first feather mite complete mitochondrial genome from the largest feather mite superfamily Analgoidea (ca. 1150 spp). The mitogenome was composed of 13 protein, 17 tRNA, and 2 rRNA-coding genes and was 14,125 bp in length.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnchytraeus polatdemiri sp. nov. (Enchytaeidae, Oligochaeta) was discovered in the framework of a sampling campaign of the benthic invertebrate fauna of the hyperalkaline Lake Van in Eastern Anatolia, Turkey, the third-largest closed lake and the largest soda lake on Earth.
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