Abstract

Fungi of Nectriaceae are economically important and of high species diversity. For the purpose of accurate and rapid species identification, ITS, 28S rDNA, β-tubulin gene and EF-1α gene were selected as the candidate DNA barcode markers to investigate their feasibility in identification of 28 well-circumscribed species belonging to 9 genera of the nectriaceous fungi. A total of 216 sequences of the candidate genes were analyzed. Intra- and inter-specific variations and success rate of PCR amplification and sequencing were considered as important criteria to estimate the candidate genes. The partial β-tubulin gene met the requirements for an ideal DNA barcode and functions well for correct species delimitation. No overlapping between the intra- and inter-specific pairwise distances was found. The smallest inter-specific distance of β-tubulin gene was 3.45%, while the largest intra-specific distance was 2.77%; which appeared to possess the appropriate intra- and inter-specific variations. Twenty-eight clusters were recognized in accordance with the 28 morphological species tested. In addition, it had a high PCR and sequencing success rate. As to the other candidates, EF-1α gene showed fairly good sequence variations among species, but the PCR and sequencing success rate reached only 75.3%. ITS had a high PCR and sequencing success rate (93.5%) and recognizes 92.9% of the total number of species, nevertheless, overlapping occurred between the intra- and inter-specific distances, which may lead to incorrect species identification. 28S rDNA is most conservative compared with any other candidate markers and able to recognize merely 60.7% of the total species. We propose β-tubulin gene as the possible barcode for the nectriaceous fungi.

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