AI Article Synopsis

  • Nematode surveys from 2010 to 2015 identified a species resembling a criconematid nematode from native prairies in North America's central tallgrass ecoregion, showing it is not common in agricultural areas.
  • Historical records show this species is cosmopolitan, feeding on various plants, but DNA barcoding reveals at least 10 distinct lineages in grasslands, which are genetically different but morphologically similar.
  • Two common lineages have different population structures and evolutionary histories, leading to the formal recognition of one as a new species, which is discussed in relation to other lineages found in the region.

Article Abstract

Nematode surveys of North American grasslands conducted from 2010 to 2015 frequently recovered a species of criconematid nematode morphologically resembling . These specimens were recovered from remnant native prairies in the central tallgrass ecoregion of North America, and not from surrounding agroecosystems. Historical records indicate that is a cosmopolitan species feeding on a wide range of agronomic and native plants. DNA barcoding indicates North American grasslands contain at least 10 phylogenetically distinct lineages of that resemble, but are not, . Analysis of the two most common lineages reveals two distinctly different population structures. The variation in population structure suggests unique evolutionary histories associated with their diversification. These two major lineages share a sympatric distribution and their slight morphological differences contrast with a high level of genetic separation. Based on their genetic divergence, fixed diagnostic nucleotides, population structure, species delimitation metrics, and a sympatric distribution, we believe that one of these distinct lineages warrants formal nomenclatural recognition. Herein, we provide formal recognition for n. sp. and discuss its relationship to other lineages discovered in native North American grasslands.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5411254PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.21307/jofnem-2017-045DOI Listing

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