| Literature DB >> 27696907 |
Ping-Shin Lee1,2, Han Ming Gan3,4, Gopalasamy Reuben Clements3,5,6,7, John-James Wilson1,2.
Abstract
Mammal diversity assessments based on DNA derived from invertebrates have been suggested as alternatives to assessments based on traditional methods; however, no study has field-tested both approaches simultaneously. In Peninsular Malaysia, we calibrated the performance of mammal DNA derived from blowflies (Diptera: Calliphoridae) against traditional methods used to detect species. We first compared five methods (cage trapping, mist netting, hair trapping, scat collection, and blowfly-derived DNA) in a forest reserve with no recent reports of megafauna. Blowfly-derived DNA and mist netting detected the joint highest number of species (n = 6). Only one species was detected by multiple methods. Compared to the other methods, blowfly-derived DNA detected both volant and non-volant species. In another forest reserve, rich in megafauna, we calibrated blowfly-derived DNA against camera traps. Blowfly-derived DNA detected more species (n = 11) than camera traps (n = 9), with only one species detected by both methods. The rarefaction curve indicated that blowfly-derived DNA would continue to detect more species with greater sampling effort. With further calibration, blowfly-derived DNA may join the list of traditional field methods. Areas for further investigation include blowfly feeding and dispersal biology, primer biases, and the assembly of a comprehensive and taxonomically-consistent DNA barcode reference library.Entities:
Keywords: Malaisie; Malaysia; cage traps; camera traps; filets japonais; hair traps; mist nets; pièges photographiques; pièges à poils; trappes
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27696907 DOI: 10.1139/gen-2015-0193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome ISSN: 0831-2796 Impact factor: 2.166