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Comprehensive evaluation of DNA barcoding for the molecular species identification of forensically important Australian Sarcophagidae (Diptera)
Author(s) -
Kelly A. Meiklejohn,
James F. Wallman,
Stephen L. Cameron,
Mark Dowton
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
invertebrate systematics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.187
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1447-2600
pISSN - 1445-5226
DOI - 10.1071/is12008
Subject(s) - dna barcoding , biology , monophyly , zoology , taxon , forensic entomology , phylocode , systematics , cytochrome c oxidase subunit i , evolutionary biology , intraspecific competition , mitochondrial dna , taxonomy (biology) , ecology , cladistics , phylogenetics , clade , gene , genetics , larva
Carrion-breeding Sarcophagidae (Diptera) can be used to estimate the post-mortem interval (PMI) in forensic cases. Difficulties with accurate morphological identifications at any life stage and a lack of documented thermobiological profiles have limited their current usefulness of these flies. The molecular-based approach of DNA barcoding, which utilises a 648-bp fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I gene, was previously evaluated in a pilot study for the discrimination between 16 Australian sarcophagids. The current study comprehensively evaluated DNA barcoding on a larger taxon set of 588 adult Australian sarcophagids. A total of 39 of the 84 known Australian species were represented by 580 specimens, which includes 92% of potentially forensically important species. A further eight specimens could not be reliably identified, but included as six unidentifable taxa. A neighbour-joining phylogenetic tree was generated and nucleotide sequence divergences were calculated using the Kimura-two-parameter distance model. All species except Sarcophaga (Fergusonimyia) bancroftorum, known for high morphological variability, were resolved as reciprocally monophyletic (99.2% of cases), with most having bootstrap support of 100. Excluding S. bancroftorum, the mean intraspecific and interspecific variation ranged from 0.00-1.12% and 2.81-11.23%, respectively, allowing for species discrimination. DNA barcoding was therefore validated as a suitable method for the molecular identification of the Australian Sarcophagidae, which will aid in the implementation of this fauna in forensic entomology

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