Abstract

BackgroundTaxonomy offers precise species identification and delimitation and thus provides basic information for biological research, e.g. through assessment of species richness. The importance of molecular taxonomy, i.e., the identification and delimitation of taxa based on molecular markers, has increased in the past decade. Recently developed exploratory tools now allow estimating species-level diversity in multi-locus molecular datasets.ResultsHere we use molecular species delimitation tools that either quantify differences in intra- and interspecific variability of loci, or divergence times within and between species, or perform coalescent species tree inference to estimate species-level entities in molecular genetic datasets. We benchmark results from these methods against 14 morphologically readily differentiable species of a well-defined subgroup of the diverse Drusinae subfamily (Trichoptera, Limnephilidae). Using a 3798 bp (6 loci) molecular data set we aim to corroborate a geographically isolated new species by integrating comparative morphological studies and molecular taxonomy.ConclusionsOur results indicate that only multi-locus species delimitation provides taxonomically relevant information. The data further corroborate the new species Drusus zivici sp. nov. We provide differential diagnostic characters and describe the male, female and larva of this new species and discuss diversity patterns of Drusinae in the Balkans. We further discuss potential and significance of molecular species delimitation. Finally we argue that enhancing collaborative integrative taxonomy will accelerate assessment of global diversity and completion of reference libraries for applied fields, e.g., conservation and biomonitoring.

Highlights

  • Taxonomy offers precise species identification and delimitation and provides basic information for biological research, e.g. through assessment of species richness

  • Based on the barcode region, ABGD suggests 13 groups [7 morphological species], and suggests D. popovi and several D. zivici sp. nov. clades as different entities

  • Barcode gap analysis of partial mtCOI-3P sequence data suggests 11 groups [7 morphological species] overpartitioning D. zivici sp. nov.), and suggests D. popovi and and two D. zivici sp. nov. clades as different entities

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Summary

Introduction

Taxonomy offers precise species identification and delimitation and provides basic information for biological research, e.g. through assessment of species richness. Characterization of species ideally uses different sources of information (ecological, morphological, anatomical, physiological, genomic, geographical or others) in an integrative taxonomic approach for the identification, delineation and description of taxa [2, 3, 26, 27]. Advances in molecular genetic methods recently promoted molecular taxonomy: species recognition and delineation based on unique genomic characters [28,29,30]. As the methods are computationally demanding, analyses of multi-locus data sets are usually employed to disentangle few morphologically defined species [34,35,36,37,38,39,40]. Speciose taxa are less likely to be addressed in molecular species delimitation analyses

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