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Featured researches published by Cuong Q. Tang.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

The widely used small subunit 18S rDNA molecule greatly underestimates true diversity in biodiversity surveys of the meiofauna

Cuong Q. Tang; Francesca Leasi; Ulrike Obertegger; Alexander Kieneke; Timothy G. Barraclough; Diego Fontaneto

Molecular tools have revolutionized the exploration of biodiversity, especially in organisms for which traditional taxonomy is difficult, such as for microscopic animals (meiofauna). Environmental (eDNA) metabarcode surveys of DNA extracted from sediment samples are increasingly popular for surveying biodiversity. Most eDNA surveys use the nuclear gene-encoding small-subunit rDNA gene (18S) as a marker; however, different markers and metrics used for delimiting species have not yet been evaluated against each other or against morphologically defined species (morphospecies). We assessed more than 12,000 meiofaunal sequences of 18S and of the main alternatively used marker [Cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) mtDNA] belonging to 55 datasets covering three taxonomic ranks. Our results show that 18S reduced diversity estimates by a factor of 0.4 relative to morphospecies, whereas COI increased diversity estimates by a factor of 7.6. Moreover, estimates of species richness using COI were robust among three of four commonly used delimitation metrics, whereas estimates using 18S varied widely with the different metrics. We show that meiofaunal diversity has been greatly underestimated by 18S eDNA surveys and that the use of COI provides a better estimate of diversity. The suitability of COI is supported by cross-mating experiments in the literature and evolutionary analyses of discreteness in patterns of genetic variation. Furthermore its splitting of morphospecies is expected from documented levels of cryptic taxa in exemplar meiofauna. We recommend against using 18S as a marker for biodiversity surveys and suggest that use of COI for eDNA surveys could provide more accurate estimates of species richness in the future.


Methods in Ecology and Evolution | 2014

Effects of phylogenetic reconstruction method on the robustness of species delimitation using single-locus data

Cuong Q. Tang; Aelys M. Humphreys; Diego Fontaneto; Timothy G. Barraclough

Coalescent-based species delimitation methods combine population genetic and phylogenetic theory to provide an objective means for delineating evolutionarily significant units of diversity. The generalised mixed Yule coalescent (GMYC) and the Poisson tree process (PTP) are methods that use ultrametric (GMYC or PTP) or non-ultrametric (PTP) gene trees as input, intended for use mostly with single-locus data such as DNA barcodes. Here, we assess how robust the GMYC and PTP are to different phylogenetic reconstruction and branch smoothing methods. We reconstruct over 400 ultrametric trees using up to 30 different combinations of phylogenetic and smoothing methods and perform over 2000 separate species delimitation analyses across 16 empirical data sets. We then assess how variable diversity estimates are, in terms of richness and identity, with respect to species delimitation, phylogenetic and smoothing methods. The PTP method generally generates diversity estimates that are more robust to different phylogenetic methods. The GMYC is more sensitive, but provides consistent estimates for BEAST trees. The lower consistency of GMYC estimates is likely a result of differences among gene trees introduced by the smoothing step. Unresolved nodes (real anomalies or methodological artefacts) affect both GMYC and PTP estimates, but have a greater effect on GMYC estimates. Branch smoothing is a difficult step and perhaps an underappreciated source of bias that may be widespread among studies of diversity and diversification. Nevertheless, careful choice of phylogenetic method does produce equivalent PTP and GMYC diversity estimates. We recommend simultaneous use of the PTP model with any model-based gene tree (e.g. RAxML) and GMYC approaches with BEAST trees for obtaining species hypotheses.


Hydrobiologia | 2017

Fifteen species in one: deciphering the Brachionus plicatilis species complex (Rotifera, Monogononta) through DNA taxonomy

Scott Mills; J. Arturo Alcántara-Rodríguez; Jorge Ciros-Pérez; Africa Gómez; Atsushi Hagiwara; Kayla Hinson Galindo; Christian D. Jersabek; Reza Malekzadeh-Viayeh; Francesca Leasi; Jae-Seong Lee; David B. Mark Welch; Spiros Papakostas; Simone Riss; Hendrik Segers; Manuel Serra; Russell J. Shiel; Radoslav Smolak; Terry W. Snell; Claus-Peter Stelzer; Cuong Q. Tang; Robert L. Wallace; Diego Fontaneto; Elizabeth J. Walsh

Abstract Understanding patterns and processes in biological diversity is a critical task given current and rapid environmental change. Such knowledge is even more essential when the taxa under consideration are important ecological and evolutionary models. One of these cases is the monogonont rotifer cryptic species complex Brachionus plicatilis, which is by far the most extensively studied group of rotifers, is widely used in aquaculture, and is known to host a large amount of unresolved diversity. Here we collate a dataset of previously available and newly generated sequences of COI and ITS1 for 1273 isolates of the B. plicatilis complex and apply three approaches in DNA taxonomy (i.e. ABGD, PTP, and GMYC) to identify and provide support for the existence of 15 species within the complex. We used these results to explore phylogenetic signal in morphometric and ecological traits, and to understand correlation among the traits using phylogenetic comparative models. Our results support niche conservatism for some traits (e.g. body length) and phylogenetic plasticity for others (e.g. genome size).


Evolutionary Biology-new York | 2012

Different diversification rates between sexual and asexual organisms

Diego Fontaneto; Cuong Q. Tang; Ulrike Obertegger; Francesca Leasi; Timothy G. Barraclough

Patterns of diversity reflect the balance between speciation and extinction over time. Here we estimate net diversification rates for samples of sexual and asexual rotifers using phylogenetic reconstructions from sequence data of one mtDNA locus, cytochrome oxidase c subunit I. All four clades of bdelloid rotifers, obligate asexuals, had higher number of species per clade and significantly higher accumulation of diversification events towards the root of the trees than the four clades of their sexual relatives, the monogonont rotifers. Such differences were robust to confounding effects of number of analysed sequences, haplotype diversity, overall genetic divergence, age of the clades or geographic coverage. Our results support the idea that differences in diversification rates could thus be ascribed to different mechanisms of speciation, with ecological speciation as the most plausible mechanism for asexual organisms.


Evolution | 2014

SEXUAL SPECIES ARE SEPARATED BY LARGER GENETIC GAPS THAN ASEXUAL SPECIES IN ROTIFERS

Cuong Q. Tang; Ulrike Obertegger; Diego Fontaneto; Timothy G. Barraclough

Why organisms diversify into discrete species instead of showing a continuum of genotypic and phenotypic forms is an important yet rarely studied question in speciation biology. Does species discreteness come from adaptation to fill discrete niches or from interspecific gaps generated by reproductive isolation? We investigate the importance of reproductive isolation by comparing genetic discreteness, in terms of intra‐ and interspecific variation, between facultatively sexual monogonont rotifers and obligately asexual bdelloid rotifers. We calculated the age (phylogenetic distance) and average pairwise genetic distance (raw distance) within and among evolutionarily significant units of diversity in six bdelloid clades and seven monogonont clades sampled for 4211 individuals in total. We find that monogonont species are more discrete than bdelloid species with respect to divergence between species but exhibit similar levels of intraspecific variation (species cohesiveness). This pattern arises because bdelloids have diversified into discrete genetic clusters at a faster net rate than monogononts. Although sampling biases or differences in ecology that are independent of sexuality might also affect these patterns, the results are consistent with the hypothesis that bdelloids diversified at a faster rate into less discrete species because their diversification does not depend on the evolution of reproductive isolation.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B: Biological Sciences | 2014

A critique of Rossberg et al.: noise obscures the genetic signal of meiobiotal ecospecies in ecogenomic datasets

M. J. Morgan; D. Bass; Holly M. Bik; C. W. Birky; Mark Blaxter; Michael D. Crisp; Sofie Derycke; David H. A. Fitch; Diego Fontaneto; C. M. Hardy; A. J. King; Karin Kiontke; Tom Moens; Jan Pawlowski; Dorota L. Porazinska; Cuong Q. Tang; William Kelley Thomas; David K. Yeates; Simon Creer

High-throughput sequencing of DNA marker genes recovered from environmental samples (known as ecogenomics or metabarcoding) is an emerging tool for understanding patterns and processes in ecology and biodiversity [[1][1]]. The recent paper ‘Are there species smaller than 1 mm?’ [[2][2]] was


Marine Biodiversity | 2015

Guidelines for DNA taxonomy, with a focus on the meiofauna

Diego Fontaneto; Jean-François Flot; Cuong Q. Tang


Advances in Ecological Research | 2016

Protecting an ecosystem service: approaches to understanding and mitigating threats to wild insect pollinators

Richard J. Gill; Katherine C. R. Baldock; Mark J. F. Brown; James E. Cresswell; Lynn V. Dicks; Michelle T. Fountain; Michael P. D. Garratt; Leonie A. Gough; Matthew S. Heard; J. M. Holland; Jeff Ollerton; Graham N. Stone; Cuong Q. Tang; Adam J. Vanbergen; Alfried P. Vogler; Guy Woodward; Andres N. Arce; Nigel Boatman; Richard Brand-Hardy; Tom D. Breeze; Mike Green; Chris M. Hartfield; Rory O’Connor; Juliet L. Osborne; James Phillips; Peter Sutton; Simon G. Potts


Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society | 2013

Cryptic diversity with wide salinity tolerance in the putative euryhaline Testudinella clypeata (Rotifera, Monogononta)

Francesca Leasi; Cuong Q. Tang; Willem H. De Smet; Diego Fontaneto


Advances in Ecological Research | 2016

Chapter Four – Protecting an Ecosystem Service: Approaches to Understanding and Mitigating Threats to Wild Insect Pollinators

Richard J. Gill; Katherine C. R. Baldock; Mark J. F. Brown; James E. Cresswell; Lynn V. Dicks; Michelle T. Fountain; Michael P. D. Garratt; Leonie A. Gough; Matthew S. Heard; J. M. Holland; Jeff Ollerton; Graham N. Stone; Cuong Q. Tang; Adam J. Vanbergen; Alfried P. Vogler; Guy Woodward; Andres N. Arce; Nigel Boatman; Richard Brand-Hardy; Tom D. Breeze; Mike Green; Chris M. Hartfield; Rory S. O'Connor; Juliet L. Osborne; James Phillips; Peter Sutton; Simon G. Potts

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Diego Fontaneto

National Research Council

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Guy Woodward

Imperial College London

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Jeff Ollerton

University of Northampton

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