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Dive into the research topics where Bronwyn H. Holmes is active.

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Featured researches published by Bronwyn H. Holmes.


Marine and Freshwater Research | 2008

DNA barcoding Australasian chondrichthyans: results and potential uses in conservation

Robert D. Ward; Bronwyn H. Holmes; William T. White

DNA barcoding – sequencing a region of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase 1 gene (cox1) – promises a rapid and accurate means of species identification, and of any life history stage. For sharks and rays, it may offer a ready means of identifying legal or illegal shark catches, including shark fins taken for the profitable shark fin market. Here it is shown that an analysis of sequence variability in a 655 bp region of cox1 from 945 specimens of 210 chondrichthyan species from 36 families permits the discrimination of 99.0% of these species. Only the two stingarees Urolophus sufflavus and U. cruciatus could not be separated, although these could be readily distinguished from eight other congeners. The average Kimura 2 parameter distance separating individuals within species was 0.37%, and the average distance separating species within genera was 7.48%. Two specimens that clustered with congeners rather than with their identified species-cluster were noted: these could represent instances of hybridisation (although this has not be documented for chondrichthyans), misidentification or mislabelling. It is concluded that cox1 barcoding can be used to identify shark and ray species with a very high degree of accuracy. The sequence variability characteristics of individuals of five species (Aetomylaeus nichofii, Dasyatis kuhlii, Dasyatis leylandi, Himantura gerrardi and Orectolobus maculatus) were consistent with cryptic speciation, and it is suggested that these five taxa be subjected to detailed taxonomic examination to confirm or refute this suggestion. The present barcoding study holds out great hope for the ready identification of sharks, shark products and shark fins, and also highlights some taxonomic issues that need to be investigated further.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2009

DNA barcoding reveals overlooked marine fishes

Tyler S. Zemlak; Robert D. Ward; Allan D. Connell; Bronwyn H. Holmes; Paul D. N. Hebert

With more than 15 000 described marine species, fishes are a conspicuous, diverse and increasingly threatened component of marine life. It is generally accepted that most large‐bodied fishes have been described, but this conclusion presumes that current taxonomic systems are robust. DNA barcoding, the analysis of a standardized region of the cytochrome c oxidase 1 gene (COI), was used to examine patterns of sequence divergence between populations of 35 fish species from opposite sides of the Indian Ocean, chosen to represent differing lifestyles from inshore to offshore. A substantial proportion of inshore species showed deep divergences between populations from South African and Australian waters (mean = 5.10%), a pattern which also emerged in a few inshore/offshore species (mean = 0.84%), but not within strictly offshore species (mean = 0.26%). Such deep divergences, detected within certain inshore and inshore/offshore taxa, are typical of divergences between congeneric species rather than between populations of a single species, suggesting that current taxonomic systems substantially underestimate species diversity. We estimate that about one third of the 1000 fish species thought to bridge South African and Australian waters actually represent two taxa.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2008

DNA barcoding discriminates echinoderm species

Robert D. Ward; Bronwyn H. Holmes; Tim D. O’Hara

DNA barcode sequences (a 657‐bp segment of the mtDNA cytochrome oxidase I gene, COI) were collected from 191 species (503 specimens) of Echinodermata. All five classes were represented: Ophiuroidea, Asteroidea, Echinoidea, Holothuroidea and Crinoidea. About 30% of sequences were collected specifically for this study, the remainder came from GenBank. Fifty‐one species were represented by multiple samples, with a mean intraspecific divergence of 0.62%. Several possible instances of cryptic speciation were noted. Thirty‐two genera were represented by multiple species, with a mean congeneric divergence of 15.33%. One hundred and eighty‐seven of the 191 species (97.9%) could be distinguished by their COI barcodes. Those that could not were from the echinoid genus Amblypneustes. Neighbour‐joining trees of COI sequences generally showed low bootstrap support for anything other than shallow splits, although with very rare exceptions, members of the same class clustered together. Two ophiuran species, in both nucleotide and amino acid neighbour‐joining trees, grouped loosely as sister taxa to Crinoidea rather than Ophiuroidea; sequences of these two species appear to have evolved very quickly. Results suggest that DNA barcoding is likely to be an effective, accurate and useful method of species diagnosis for all five classes of Echinodermata.


Environmental Microbiology | 2015

Water addition regulates the metabolic activity of ammonia oxidizers responding to environmental perturbations in dry subhumid ecosystems.

Hang-Wei Hu; Catriona A. Macdonald; Pankaj Trivedi; Bronwyn H. Holmes; Levente Bodrossy; Ji-Zheng He; Brajesh K. Singh

Terrestrial arid and semi-arid ecosystems (drylands) constitute about 41% of the Earths land surface and are predicted to experience increasing fluctuations in water and nitrogen availability. Mounting evidence has confirmed the significant importance of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) and bacteria (AOB) in nitrification, plant nitrogen availability and atmospheric N2 O emissions, but their responses to environmental perturbations in drylands remain largely unknown. Here we evaluate how the factorial combinations of irrigation and fertilization in forests and land-use change from grassland to forest affects the dynamics of AOA and AOB following a 6-year dryland field study. Potential nitrification rates and AOA and AOB abundances were significantly higher in the irrigated plots, accompanied by considerable changes in community compositions, but their responses to fertilization alone were not significant. DNA-stable isotope probing results showed increased (13) CO2 incorporation into the amoA gene of AOA, but not of AOB, in plots receiving water addition, coupled with significantly higher net mineralization and nitrification rates. High-throughput microarray analysis revealed that active AOA assemblages belonging to Nitrosopumilus and Nitrosotalea were increasingly labelled by (13) CO2 following irrigation. However, no obvious effects of land-use changes on nitrification rates or metabolic activity of AOA and AOB could be observed under dry conditions. We provide evidence that water addition had more important roles than nitrogen fertilization in influencing the autotrophic nitrification in dryland ecosystems, and AOA are increasingly involved in ammonia oxidation when dry soils become wetted.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Reduction of the Powerful Greenhouse Gas N2O in the South-Eastern Indian Ocean.

Eric J. Raes; Levente Bodrossy; Jodie van de Kamp; Bronwyn H. Holmes; Nick Hardman-Mountford; Peter A. Thompson; Allison S. McInnes; Anya M. Waite

Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a powerful greenhouse gas and a key catalyst of stratospheric ozone depletion. Yet, little data exist about the sink and source terms of the production and reduction of N2O outside the well-known oxygen minimum zones (OMZ). Here we show the presence of functional marker genes for the reduction of N2O in the last step of the denitrification process (nitrous oxide reductase genes; nosZ) in oxygenated surface waters (180–250 O2 μmol.kg-1) in the south-eastern Indian Ocean. Overall copy numbers indicated that nosZ genes represented a significant proportion of the microbial community, which is unexpected in these oxygenated waters. Our data show strong temperature sensitivity for nosZ genes and reaction rates along a vast latitudinal gradient (32°S-12°S). These data suggest a large N2O sink in the warmer Tropical waters of the south-eastern Indian Ocean. Clone sequencing from PCR products revealed that most denitrification genes belonged to Rhodobacteraceae. Our work highlights the need to investigate the feedback and tight linkages between nitrification and denitrification (both sources of N2O, but the latter also a source of bioavailable N losses) in the understudied yet strategic Indian Ocean and other oligotrophic systems.


Scientific Data | 2018

Systematic, continental scale temporal monitoring of marine pelagic microbiota by the Australian Marine Microbial Biodiversity Initiative

Mark V. Brown; Jodie van de Kamp; Martin Ostrowski; Justin R. Seymour; Tim Ingleton; Lauren F. Messer; Thomas C. Jeffries; Nahshon Siboni; Bonnie Laverock; Jaume Bibiloni-Isaksson; Tiffanie M. Nelson; Frank Coman; Claire H. Davies; Dion M. F. Frampton; Mark Rayner; Kirianne Goossen; Stan S. Robert; Bronwyn H. Holmes; Guy C.J. Abell; Pascal Craw; Tim Kahlke; Swan Li San Sow; Kirsty McAllister; Jonathan Windsor; Michele Skuza; Ryan Crossing; Nicole Patten; Paul Malthouse; Paul van Ruth; Ian T. Paulsen

Sustained observations of microbial dynamics are rare, especially in southern hemisphere waters. The Australian Marine Microbial Biodiversity Initiative (AMMBI) provides methodologically standardized, continental scale, temporal phylogenetic amplicon sequencing data describing Bacteria, Archaea and microbial Eukarya assemblages. Sequence data is linked to extensive physical, biological and chemical oceanographic contextual information. Samples are collected monthly to seasonally from multiple depths at seven sites: Darwin Harbour (Northern Territory), Yongala (Queensland), North Stradbroke Island (Queensland), Port Hacking (New South Wales), Maria Island (Tasmania), Kangaroo Island (South Australia), Rottnest Island (Western Australia). These sites span ~30° of latitude and ~38° longitude, range from tropical to cold temperate zones, and are influenced by both local and globally significant oceanographic and climatic features. All sequence datasets are provided in both raw and processed fashion. Currently 952 samples are publically available for bacteria and archaea which include 88,951,761 bacterial (72,435 unique) and 70,463,079 archaeal (24,205 unique) 16 S rRNA v1-3 gene sequences, and 388 samples are available for eukaryotes which include 39,801,050 (78,463 unique) 18 S rRNA v4 gene sequences.


Fisheries Research | 2009

Identification of shark and ray fins using DNA barcoding.

Bronwyn H. Holmes; Dirk Steinke; Robert D. Ward


Molecular Ecology Notes | 2007

An analysis of nucleotide and amino acid variability in the barcode region of cytochrome c oxidase I (cox1) in fishes

Robert D. Ward; Bronwyn H. Holmes


Aquatic Biology | 2008

DNA barcoding of shared fish species from the North Atlantic and Australasia: minimal divergence for most taxa, but Zeus faber and Lepidopus caudatus each probably constitute two species

Robert D. Ward; Filipe O. Costa; Bronwyn H. Holmes; Dirk Steinke


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2016

Effects of climate warming and elevated CO2 on autotrophic nitrification and nitrifiers in dryland ecosystems

Hang-Wei Hu; Catriona A. Macdonald; Pankaj Trivedi; Ian C. Anderson; Yong Zheng; Bronwyn H. Holmes; Levente Bodrossy; Jun-Tao Wang; Ji-Zheng He; Brajesh K. Singh

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Robert D. Ward

CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research

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Levente Bodrossy

CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research

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Hang-Wei Hu

University of Melbourne

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Pankaj Trivedi

Colorado State University

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Ji-Zheng He

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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