Eyeing DNA barcoding for species identification of fish larvae

Author:

Chan Wan Wen Rochelle1ORCID,Chang Jia Jin Marc1ORCID,Tan Charles Zhiming1,Ng Jie Xin1,Ng Matthew Hui‐Chieh1,Jaafar Zeehan123ORCID,Huang Danwei1234ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences National University of Singapore Singapore

2. Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum National University of Singapore Singapore

3. Tropical Marine Science Institute, National University of Singapore Singapore

4. Centre for Nature‐based Climate Solutions National University of Singapore Singapore

Abstract

AbstractIdentification of fish larvae based on morphology is typically limited to higher taxonomic ranks (e.g., family or order), as larvae possess few morphological diagnostic characters for precise discrimination to species. When many samples are presented at any one time, the use of morphology to identify such specimens can be laborious and time‐consuming. Using a reverse workflow for specimen sorting and identification leveraging high‐throughput DNA sequencing, thousands of fish larvae can be DNA barcoded and sorted into molecular operational taxonomic units (mOTUs) in a single sequencing run with the nanopore sequencing technology (e.g., MinION). This process reduces the time and financial costs of morphology‐based sorting and instead deploys experienced taxonomists for species taxonomic work where they are needed most. In this study, a total of 3022 fish larval specimens from plankton tows across four sites in Singapore were collected and sorted based on this workflow. Eye tissue from individual samples was used for DNA extraction and sequencing of cytochrome c oxidase subunit I. We generated a total of 2746 barcodes after quality filtering (90.9% barcoding success), identified 2067 DNA barcodes (75.3% identification success), and delimited 256 mOTUs (146 genera, 52 families). Our analyses identified specific challenges to species assignment, such as the potential misidentification of publicly available sequences used as reference barcodes. We highlighted how the conservative application and comparison of a local sequence database can help resolve identification conflicts. Overall, this proposed approach enables and expedites taxonomic identification of fish larvae, contributing to the enhancement of reference barcode databases and potentially better understanding of fish connectivity.

Funder

National Parks Board - Singapore

Publisher

Wiley

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