Abstract

In spite of the growth of molecular ecology, systematics and next-generation sequencing, the discovery and analysis of diversity is not currently integrated with building the tree-of-life. Tropical arthropod ecologists are well placed to accelerate this process if all specimens obtained through mass-trapping, many of which will be new species, could be incorporated routinely into phylogeny reconstruction. Here we test a shotgun sequencing approach, whereby mitochondrial genomes are assembled from complex ecological mixtures through mitochondrial metagenomics, and demonstrate how the approach overcomes many of the taxonomic impediments to the study of biodiversity. DNA from approximately 500 beetle specimens, originating from a single rainforest canopy fogging sample from Borneo, was pooled and shotgun sequenced, followed by de novo assembly of complete and partial mitogenomes for 175 species. The phylogenetic tree obtained from this local sample was highly similar to that from existing mitogenomes selected for global coverage of major lineages of Coleoptera. When all sequences were combined only minor topological changes were induced against this reference set, indicating an increasingly stable estimate of coleopteran phylogeny, while the ecological sample expanded the tip-level representation of several lineages. Robust trees generated from ecological samples now enable an evolutionary framework for ecology. Meanwhile, the inclusion of uncharacterized samples in the tree-of-life rapidly expands taxon and biogeographic representation of lineages without morphological identification. Mitogenomes from shotgun sequencing of unsorted environmental samples and their associated metadata, placed robustly into the phylogenetic tree, constitute novel DNA “superbarcodes” for testing hypotheses regarding global patterns of diversity.

Highlights

  • The great majority of species on Earth is yet to be discovered, (Gibson et al 2014), or they rely on sequence-based operational and even for those species that have been formally described, a taxonomic units (OTUs) that are not reconciled with Linnaean phylogenetic placement as the basis for comparative biology is species (Ji et al 2013; Cristescu 2014)

  • We explore how mitochondrial metagenomics on mixed assemblages can contribute to build the tree-of-life by shotgun sequencing a mass-trapped sample of tropical biodiversity

  • The data were further filtered with BLASTn against a database of 245 identified coleopteran mitogenomes (Timmermans MJTN, Barton C, Haran J, Ahrens D, Culverwell L, Ollikainen A, Dodsworth S, Foster PG, Bocak L, Vogler AP, unpublished data), hereafter “MitoDB”, at E 1e5, to retain only “mitochondrial-like” reads for analysis, for a total of 9.91% and 11.24% in the short- and long-insert libraries, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

The great majority of species on Earth is yet to be discovered, (Gibson et al 2014), or they rely on sequence-based operational and even for those species that have been formally described, a taxonomic units (OTUs) that are not reconciled with Linnaean phylogenetic placement as the basis for comparative biology is species (Ji et al 2013; Cristescu 2014). NGS technol- rently overcome the evident disconnect between research proogies may greatly increase the number of species that can grams in species discovery (Riedel et al 2013) and various kinds be subjected to DNA analyses (Santamaria et al 2012; Gibson of phylogenomic analysis (Bernt, Bleidorn, et al 2013; Maia et al. NGS technol- rently overcome the evident disconnect between research proogies may greatly increase the number of species that can grams in species discovery (Riedel et al 2013) and various kinds be subjected to DNA analyses It is current practice in molecular taxonomy and systemexisting reference data from conventional sequencing, such as atics to target specific taxa for their relevance to particular ß The Author 2015.

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