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Featured researches published by Bernd Schierwater.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2008

Character-based DNA barcoding allows discrimination of genera, species and populations in Odonata

J. Rach; Rob DeSalle; Indra Neil Sarkar; Bernd Schierwater; Heike Hadrys

DNA barcoding has become a promising means for identifying organisms of all life stages. Currently, phenetic approaches and tree-building methods have been used to define species boundaries and discover ‘cryptic species’. However, a universal threshold of genetic distance values to distinguish taxonomic groups cannot be determined. As an alternative, DNA barcoding approaches can be ‘character based’, whereby species are identified through the presence or absence of discrete nucleotide substitutions (character states) within a DNA sequence. We demonstrate the potential of character-based DNA barcodes by analysing 833 odonate specimens from 103 localities belonging to 64 species. A total of 54 species and 22 genera could be discriminated reliably through unique combinations of character states within only one mitochondrial gene region (NADH dehydrogenase 1). Character-based DNA barcodes were further successfully established at a population level discriminating seven population-specific entities out of a total of 19 populations belonging to three species. Thus, for the first time, DNA barcodes have been found to identify entities below the species level that may constitute separate conservation units or even species units. Our findings suggest that character-based DNA barcoding can be a rapid and reliable means for (i) the assignment of unknown specimens to a taxonomic group, (ii) the exploration of diagnosability of conservation units, and (iii) complementing taxonomic identification systems.


Evolution & Development | 2006

A low diversity of ANTP class homeobox genes in Placozoa

Ana Sara Monteiro; Bernd Schierwater; Stephen L. Dellaporta; Peter W. H. Holland

SUMMARY Homeobox genes of the ANTP and PRD classes play important roles in body patterning of metazoans, and a large diversity of these genes have been described in bilaterian animals and cnidarians. Trichoplax adhaerens (Phylum Placozoa) is a small multicellular marine animal with one of the simplest body organizations of all metazoans, showing no symmetry and a small number of distinct cell types. Only two ANTP class genes have been described from Trichoplax: the Hox/ParaHox gene Trox‐2 and a gene related to the Not family. Here we report an extensive screen for ANTP class genes in Trichoplax, leading to isolation of three additional ANTP class genes. These can be assigned to the Dlx, Mnx and Hmx gene families. Sequencing approximately 12–20 kb around each gene indicates that none are part of tight gene clusters, and in situ hybridization reveals that at least two have spatially restricted expression around the periphery of the animal. The low diversity of ANTP class genes isolated in Trichoplax can be reconciled with the low anatomical complexity of this animal, although the finding that these genes are assignable to recognized gene families is intriguing.


Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution | 2016

Never Ending Analysis of a Century Old Evolutionary Debate: "Unringing" the Urmetazoon Bell

Bernd Schierwater; Peter W. H. Holland; David J. Miller; Peter F. Stadler; Brian M. Wiegmann; Gert Wörheide; Gregory A. Wray; Rob DeSalle

Our understanding of the early evolution of animals will be greatly improved if a final solution can be found to the evolutionary relationships between Porifera, Placozoa, Ctenophora, Cnidaria and Bilateria. There have been many recent attempts to solve this key issue at the base of the metazoan tree of life, and these have sparked heated discussions and highlighted fundamental analytical problems. We argue that solving this problem will necessitate analysis of disparate data types, including phylogenomic data, larger scale genomic characters, developmental data and morphological characters. At the least, morphological and developmental data must be used to cross-validate phylogenomic conclusions, but ideally solutions should be sought to the problems of combining disparate data sources with appropriate character weighting and algorithm choice.


Archive | 2013

Additional data to: Deep metazoan phylogeny: When different genes tell different stories

Tetyana Nosenko; Fabian Schreiber; Maja Adamska; Marcin Adamski; Michael Eitel; Jörg U. Hammel; Manuel Maldonado; Werner E. G. Müller; Michael Nickel; Bernd Schierwater; Jean Vacelet; Matthias Wiens; Gert Wörheide


Archive | 2010

Elucidating Animal Phylogeny: Advances in Knowledge and Forthcoming Challenges

Rob DeSalle; Bernd Schierwater


Archive | 2010

Pattern and Process at the Base of the Metazoan Tree of Life

Rob DeSalle; Bernd Schierwater


Archive | 2010

Questions and Discussion

Rob DeSalle; Bernd Schierwater


Archive | 2010

The Earliest Animals

Rob DeSalle; Bernd Schierwater


Archive | 2010

Tangled Roots in the Animal Tree of Life

Rob DeSalle; Bernd Schierwater


Archive | 2010

Color Plate Section

Rob DeSalle; Bernd Schierwater

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Rob DeSalle

American Museum of Natural History

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Brian M. Wiegmann

North Carolina State University

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Heike Hadrys

American Museum of Natural History

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Maja Adamska

University of California

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