AI Article Synopsis

  • Coral reefs are facing severe threats from climate change, prompting the aquarium community to play a crucial role in conservation efforts, yet many coral species remain unidentified in aquaria, complicating conservation assessments.
  • This study utilizes DNA barcoding alongside traditional morphological methods to identify various coral species in 127 aquarium samples, successfully identifying 44% to species level and offering provisional identifications for 80%.
  • The research highlights limitations in public genomic databases, the necessity of diversifying reference sequences, and proposes a standardized approach for effective species identification to aid both taxonomists and aquarists alike.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: The unprecedented threats to coral reef ecosystems from global climate change require an urgent response from the aquarium community, which is becoming an increasingly vital coral conservation resource. Unfortunately, many hermatypic corals in aquaria are not identified to species level, which hinders assessment of their conservation significance. Traditional methods of species identification using morphology can be challenging, especially to non-taxonomists. DNA barcoding is an option for species identification of Scleractinian corals, especially when used in concert with morphology-based assessment. This study uses DNA barcodes to try to identify aquarium specimens of the diverse reef-forming genus from 127 samples. We identified to our best current knowledge, to species name 44% of the analysed samples and provided provisional identification for 80% of them (101/127, in the form of a list of species names with associate confidence values). We highlighted a sampling bias in public nucleotide sequences repertories (e.g. GenBank) towards more charismatic and more studied species, even inside a well-studied genus like . In addition, we showed a potential "single observer" effect with over a quarter of the reference sequences used for these identifications coming from the same study. We propose the use of barcoding and query matching as an additional tool for taxonomic experts and general aquarists, as an additional tool to increase their chances of making high confidence species-level identifications. We produce a standardised and easily repeatable methodology to increase the capacity of aquariums and other facilities to assess non-ascribed species, emphasising the value of integrating this approach with morphological identification optimising usage of authoritative identification guides and expert opinion.

Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12686-021-01250-3.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8750641PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12686-021-01250-3DOI Listing

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