:: Volume 19, Issue 3 (2020) ::
IJFS 2020, 19 Back to browse issues page
DNA barcoding of Nereididae polychaetes based on COI gene barcoding in intertidal shores of Bushehr and Bandar Abbas provinces, Iran
S. Amiri , P. Ghavam Mostafavi * , M.B. Nabavi , M.H. Shahhosseini
Marine Biology Group, Marine Science and Technology Department, Islamic Azad University Science and Research Branch, Tehran, Iran. , mostafavi_pa@srbiau.ac.ir
Abstract:   (2669 Views)
Although polychaetes are the most abundant organisms in marine ecosystems, still their genetic diversity is understood inadequately. In this study, molecular identification of Nereididae polychaetes was performed by sequencing a segment of mitochondrial COI gene, isolated from mitochondrial DNA, and comparing nucleotide divergence, Molecular taxonomy, interspecific and intraspecific relations of Nereid species among 4 intertidal stations assigned in Persian Gulf of Iran. Analysis of 109 identified specimens, revealed 78 provisional gene sequences, related to 9 species and 6 genera, in which interspecific divergence was 1.4 times higher than intraspecific divergence (2.82% versus 1.95%). The average pairwise sequence divergence for all sequences was estimated at 1.37%. In three cases maximum divergence within a lineage exceeded the minimum nearest-neighbor distance: Perinereis sp., Platynereis sp. and Platynereis bicanaliculata. Maximum species similarity was observed amongst 3 sampling sites assigned in Bushehr Province whilst Bandar Abbas`s specimens showed less similarity to Bushehr station. Out of the 109 COI gene sequences of Nereididae polychaetes in this study, 34 contained multiple lineages. These results support the assertion that many Nereid populations in the Persian Gulf previously thought of as a single species, actually consist of two or more divergent lineages.
Keywords: Polychaetes, Nereididae, COI, Barcoding, Persian Gulf
Full-Text [PDF 889 kb]   (1726 Downloads)    
Type of Study: Orginal research papers | Subject: Genetics
Received: 2018/06/2 | Accepted: 2018/09/11 | Published: 2020/05/1


XML     Print



Rights and permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Volume 19, Issue 3 (2020) Back to browse issues page