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Date: December 2010
Pub: Mitochondrial DNA, December 2010; 21(S1): 44–50
Author(s): FERNANDO A. CERVANTES, JESSICA ARCANGELI1, YOLANDA HORTELANOMONCADA, & ALEX V. BORISENKO
Abstract:
Two morphologically similar species of opossum from the genus Didelphis–Didelphis virginiana and Didelphis marsupialis–cooccur sympatrically in Mexico. High intraspecific variation complicates their morphological discrimination, under both field and museum conditions. This study aims to evaluate the utility and reliability of using DNA barcodes (short standardized genome fragments used for DNA-based identification) to distinguish these two species. Sequences of the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (Cox1) mitochondrial gene were obtained from 12 D. marsupialis and 29 D. virginiana individuals and werecompared using the neighbor-joining (NJ) algorithm with Kimura’s two-parameter (K2P) model of nucleotide substitution. Average K2P distances were 1.56% within D. virginiana and 1.65% in D. marsupialis. Interspecific distances between D. virginiana and D. marsupialis varied from 7.8 to 9.3% and their barcode sequences formed distinct non-overlapping clusterson NJ trees. All sympatric specimens of both species were effectively discriminated, confirming the utility of Cox1 barcoding as a tool for taxonomic identification of these morphologically similar taxa.
PDF Attached.
Tags: Cox1, Didelphidae, Didelphimorphia, distance, genetic, identification, taxonomic
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