Biodiversity inventory of the grey mullets (Actinopterygii: Mugilidae) of the Indo‐Australian Archipelago through the iterative use of DNA‐based species delimitation and specimen assignment methods

Delrieu‐Trottin, Erwan and Durand, Jean‐Dominique and Limmon, Gino and Sukmono, Tedjo and Kadarusman and Sugeha, Hagi Yulia and Chen, Wei‐Jen and Busson, Frédéric and Borsa, Philippe and Dahruddin, Hadi and Sauri, Sopian and Fitriana, Yuli and Zein, Mochamad Syamsul Arifin and Hocdé, Régis and Pouyaud, Laurent and Keith, Philippe and Wowor, Daisy and Steinke, Dirk and Hanner, Robert and Hubert, Nicolas (2020) Biodiversity inventory of the grey mullets (Actinopterygii: Mugilidae) of the Indo‐Australian Archipelago through the iterative use of DNA‐based species delimitation and specimen assignment methods. Evolutionary Applications, 13 (6). pp. 1451-1467. ISSN 1752-4571

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Abstract

DNA barcoding opens new perspectives on the way we document biodiversity. Initially proposed to circumvent the limits of morphological characters to assign un known individuals to known species, DNA barcoding has been used in a wide array of studies where collecting species identity constitutes a crucial step. The assignment of unknowns to knowns assumes that species are already well identified and deline ated, making the assignment performed reliable. Here, we used DNA-based species delimitation and specimen assignment methods iteratively to tackle the inventory of the Indo-Australian Archipelago grey mullets, a notorious case of taxonomic com plexity that requires DNA-based identification methods considering that traditional morphological identifications are usually not repeatable and sequence mislabeling is common in international sequence repositories. We first revisited a DNA barcode reference library available at the global scale for Mugilidae through different DNA based species delimitation methods to produce a robust consensus scheme of species delineation. We then used this curated library to assign unknown specimens collected throughout the Indo-Australian Archipelago to known species. A second iteration of OTU delimitation and specimen assignment was then performed. We show the ben efits of using species delimitation and specimen assignment methods iteratively to improve the accuracy of specimen identification and propose a workflow to do so.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Coral Triangle, cryptic diversity, DNA barcoding, reference library, taxonomic gap
Subjects: Medicine & Biology
Depositing User: Mrs Titi Herawati
Date Deposited: 26 Jun 2026 04:47
Last Modified: 26 Jun 2026 04:47
URI: https://karya.brin.go.id/id/eprint/59213

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