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Second-generation environmental sequencing unmasks marine metazoan biodiversity

Second-generation environmental sequencing unmasks marine metazoan biodiversity
Second-generation environmental sequencing unmasks marine metazoan biodiversity
Biodiversity is of crucial importance for ecosystem functioning, sustainability and resilience, but the magnitude and organization of marine diversity at a range of spatial and taxonomic scales are undefined. In this paper, we use second-generation sequencing to unmask putatively diverse marine metazoan biodiversity in a Scottish temperate benthic ecosystem. We show that remarkable differences in diversity occurred at microgeographical scales and refute currently accepted ecological and taxonomic paradigms of meiofaunal identity, rank abundance and concomitant understanding of trophic dynamics. Richness estimates from the current benchmarked Operational Clustering of Taxonomic Units from Parallel UltraSequencing analyses are broadly aligned with those derived from morphological assessments. However, the slope of taxon rarefaction curves for many phyla remains incomplete, suggesting that the true alpha diversity is likely to exceed current perceptions. The approaches provide a rapid, objective and cost-effective taxonomic framework for exploring links between ecosystem structure and function of all hitherto intractable, but ecologically important, communities.
98
Fonseca, Vera G.
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Carvalho, Gary R.
fe03b393-a1af-4639-8a93-684e58d3434a
Sung, Way
f3150c88-7c7f-46dc-b350-722607c50b9e
Johnson, Harriet F.
e5dcf588-d92b-4c5f-973d-d36eed83fd66
Power, Deborah M.
96dc370f-0efb-42ab-bb89-55767f2bf1ea
Neill, Simon P.
93fea49b-21f9-4202-9908-d4fcd815c544
Packer, Margaret
5aaf90bf-be50-45ed-887a-fe4d82212fc1
Blaxter, Mark L.
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Lambshead, P. John D.
fe845f6c-a28f-4e4b-b64f-cee2f83bdffc
Thomas, W. Kelley
9ae8fc0e-1b87-4b62-8e35-3dcdd6168a3c
Creer, Simon
d032cd75-9ed6-4bb8-b55b-926afb575321
Fonseca, Vera G.
6fabd0f1-4108-425e-ae17-d80cbaefcce8
Carvalho, Gary R.
fe03b393-a1af-4639-8a93-684e58d3434a
Sung, Way
f3150c88-7c7f-46dc-b350-722607c50b9e
Johnson, Harriet F.
e5dcf588-d92b-4c5f-973d-d36eed83fd66
Power, Deborah M.
96dc370f-0efb-42ab-bb89-55767f2bf1ea
Neill, Simon P.
93fea49b-21f9-4202-9908-d4fcd815c544
Packer, Margaret
5aaf90bf-be50-45ed-887a-fe4d82212fc1
Blaxter, Mark L.
5f03450c-455a-448d-97cc-ea096ba0c57e
Lambshead, P. John D.
fe845f6c-a28f-4e4b-b64f-cee2f83bdffc
Thomas, W. Kelley
9ae8fc0e-1b87-4b62-8e35-3dcdd6168a3c
Creer, Simon
d032cd75-9ed6-4bb8-b55b-926afb575321

Fonseca, Vera G., Carvalho, Gary R., Sung, Way, Johnson, Harriet F., Power, Deborah M., Neill, Simon P., Packer, Margaret, Blaxter, Mark L., Lambshead, P. John D., Thomas, W. Kelley and Creer, Simon (2010) Second-generation environmental sequencing unmasks marine metazoan biodiversity. Nature Communications, 1 (7), 98. (doi:10.1038/ncomms1095).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Biodiversity is of crucial importance for ecosystem functioning, sustainability and resilience, but the magnitude and organization of marine diversity at a range of spatial and taxonomic scales are undefined. In this paper, we use second-generation sequencing to unmask putatively diverse marine metazoan biodiversity in a Scottish temperate benthic ecosystem. We show that remarkable differences in diversity occurred at microgeographical scales and refute currently accepted ecological and taxonomic paradigms of meiofaunal identity, rank abundance and concomitant understanding of trophic dynamics. Richness estimates from the current benchmarked Operational Clustering of Taxonomic Units from Parallel UltraSequencing analyses are broadly aligned with those derived from morphological assessments. However, the slope of taxon rarefaction curves for many phyla remains incomplete, suggesting that the true alpha diversity is likely to exceed current perceptions. The approaches provide a rapid, objective and cost-effective taxonomic framework for exploring links between ecosystem structure and function of all hitherto intractable, but ecologically important, communities.

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Published date: 19 October 2010

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 174257
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/174257
PURE UUID: 4d192be7-8675-4c10-83c2-baba65662858

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Date deposited: 11 Feb 2011 13:45
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:33

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Contributors

Author: Vera G. Fonseca
Author: Gary R. Carvalho
Author: Way Sung
Author: Harriet F. Johnson
Author: Deborah M. Power
Author: Simon P. Neill
Author: Margaret Packer
Author: Mark L. Blaxter
Author: P. John D. Lambshead
Author: W. Kelley Thomas
Author: Simon Creer

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