Abstract

DNA holds great potential for species identification and efforts to create a DNA database of all animals and plants currently contains >7.5 million sequences representing ~300,000 species. This promise of a universally applicable identification tool suggests that morphologically based tools and taxonomists will soon not have utility. Here we demonstrate that DNA-based identification is not reliable without the contributions of taxonomic experts. We use ambrosia beetles (Xyleborini), which are known for great diversity as well as global invasions and damage, as a test case. Recent xyleborine introductions have caused major economic and ecological losses, thus timely species identifications of new invaders are necessary. This need is hampered by a paucity of identification tools and a fauna that is only moderately documented. To help alleviate deficiencies in their identification, we created COI and CAD DNA barcode databases (490 and 429 specimens), representing over half of the known fauna of Southeast Asia (165/316 species). Taxonomic experts identified species based on original descriptions and type specimens. Tree, distance, and iterative methods were used to assess the identification and delimitation of species. High intra- and interspecific COI distances were observed for congeneric species and attributed to the beetle’s inbreeding system. Neither of the two markers provided 100% identification success but with the neighbor-joining tree-based method, 80% of species were identified by both genes. As for species delimitation, an obvious barcode gap between intra- and interspecific differences was not observed. Correspondence between distance-based groups and morphology-based species was poor. In a demonstration of iterative taxonomy, we constructed parsimony-based phylogenies using COI and CAD sequences for two genera. Although not all clades were resolved or supported, we provided better explanations for species boundaries in light of morphological and DNA sequence differences. Confident species identifications demonstrated 10–12% COI and/or >2–3% CAD. Involvement of taxonomic experts from the start of this project was essential for the creation of a stable foundation for the DNA identification of xyleborine species. In general, their role in DNA barcoding cannot be underestimated and is further discussed.

Highlights

  • Xyleborine ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae: Scolytinae) occur throughout the world’s forests with most of the diversity in the moist tropics where they comprise the majority of the scolytine diversity (Browne, 1961; Wood and Bright, 1992; Hulcr et al, 2015)

  • We demonstrate that the use of c oxidase subunit I gene (COI) and CAD can help the identification and delimitation of xyleborine species and discuss the role of the taxonomist in the creation of a DNA barcoding database

  • COI sequences showed no double peaks in chromatograms, double peaks were observed in some in CAD chromatograms, which we attributed to allelic variation

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Summary

Introduction

Xyleborine ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae: Scolytinae) occur throughout the world’s forests with most of the diversity in the moist tropics where they comprise the majority of the scolytine diversity (Browne, 1961; Wood and Bright, 1992; Hulcr et al, 2015) These beetles exhibit two conspicuous life history traits: they cultivate symbiotic fungi for food in tunnels that they bore into recently dead trees (and their parts), and they are haplodiploid and highly inbred with female-skewed sex ratios averaging 13:1 (Kirkendall, 1993; Cooperband et al, 2016; Castro et al, 2019). A subset of these species has been introduced into Europe in the last two decades (Kirkendall and Faccoli, 2010; Dodelin, 2018)

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