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Featured researches published by Eleanor A. S. Adamson.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2010

A reappraisal of the evolution of Asian snakehead fishes (Pisces, Channidae) using molecular data from multiple genes and fossil calibration.

Eleanor A. S. Adamson; David A. Hurwood; Peter B. Mather

Freshwater snakehead fishes (Channidae) provide an interesting target for phylogenetic analysis for the following reasons, their unusual biology, potential for cryptic diversity and availability of a good fossil record. Here, a multi-locus molecular phylogeny was constructed and calibrated using two fossil dates to estimate divergence times within the family. Sampling aimed to explore interspecific divergence of Channa species across Southeast Asia and intra-specific variation where species possessed natural geographical ranges that were extensive. Results contradict divergence times estimated previously independently from single locus mitochondrial data or the fossil record and suggest that after divergence from African taxa 40-50 Ma, evolution of Asian snakeheads has been heavily influenced by multiple broad scale dispersal events across India and Southeast Asia. A similar pattern of divergence within multiple clades suggests that west-east dispersal was limited for many taxa during the Miocene. Deep intra-specific divergence was inferred for C. striata, indicating that long historical periods of isolation ( approximately 8Ma) have not resulted in the evolution of reproductive isolation within this species. Results support suggestions that C. marulia like fishes in northern Cambodia may constitute an undescribed species, and that Indian C. diplogramma warrants taxonomic recognition as being distinct from Southeast Asian C. micropeltes, with the two taxa last sharing a common ancestor in the mid- to late-Miocene.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2009

Population subdivision in Siamese mud carp Henicorhynchus siamensis in the Mekong River basin: implications for management

Eleanor A. S. Adamson; David A. Hurwood; Andrew M. Baker; Peter B. Mather

A molecular approach was employed to investigate stock structure in Siamese mud carp Henicorhynchus siamensis populations collected from 14 sites across mainland south-east Asia, with the major focus being the lower Mekong River basin. Spatial analysis of a mitochondrial DNA fragment (ATPase 6 and 8) identified four stocks in the Mekong River basin that were all significantly differentiated from a population in the nearby Khlong River, Thailand. In the Mekong River basin, populations in northern Lao Peoples Democratic Republic and northern Thailand represent two independent stocks, and samples from Thai tributaries group with those from adjacent Mekong sites above the Khone Falls to form a third stock. All sites below the Khone Falls constituted a single vast stock that includes Cambodia and the Mekong Delta in Vietnam. While H. siamensis is considered currently to undertake extensive annual migrations across the Mekong River basin, the data presented here suggest that natural gene flow may occur over much more restricted geographical scales within the basin, and hence populations may need to be managed at finer spatial scales than at the whole-of-drainage-basin level.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Exploring hidden diversity in Southeast Asia’s Dermogenys spp. (Beloniformes: Zenarchopteridae) through DNA barcoding

Samsudin Nurul Farhana; Zainal A. Muchlisin; Thuy Yen Duong; Suwat Tanyaros; Lawrence M. Page; Yahui Zhao; Eleanor A. S. Adamson; Md. Zain Khaironizam; Mark de Bruyn; Mohd Nor Siti Azizah

Members of the freshwater halfbeak genus Dermogenys are hard to identify to the species level, despite several previous attempts to isolate fixed meristic, morphometric and colour pattern differences. This has led to ongoing confusion in scientific literature, records of species occurrence, and entries in museum collections. Here, a DNA barcoding study was conducted on the genus to gain further understanding of its taxonomic status across the Southeast Asian region. Fish were collected from 33 localities, spanning freshwater and brackish habitats in Malaysia, Western Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam. In total, 290 samples of Dermogenys spp. were amplified for a 651 base pair fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase c subunit I (COI) gene. Analysis was able to successfully differentiate the three species: D. collettei, D. siamensis, D. sumatrana; reveal the presence of a new putative species, Dermogenys sp., that was sampled in sympatry with D. collettei at three locations; as well as uncovering two genetic lineages of a fifth species, D. bispina, that display non-overlapping geographical distributions in drainages of northern Borneo; Kudat and Sandakan. This study expands the barcode library for Zenarchopteridae, demonstrates the efficacy of DNA barcoding techniques for differentiating Dermogenys species, and the potential thereof in species discovery.


Conservation Genetics Resources | 2016

Microsatellite discovery in an insular amphibian (Grandisonia alternans) with comments on cross-species utility and the accuracy of locus identification from unassembled Illumina data

Eleanor A. S. Adamson; Anwesha Saha; Simon T. Maddock; Ronald A. Nussbaum; David J. Gower; Jeffrey W. Streicher

The Seychelles archipelago is unique among isolated oceanic islands because it features an endemic radiation of caecilian amphibians (Gymnophiona). In order to develop population genetics resources for this system, we identified microsatellite loci using unassembled Illumina MiSeq data generated from a genomic library of Grandisonia alternans, a species that occurs on multiple islands in the archipelago. Applying a recently described method (PALFINDER) we identified 8001 microsatellite loci that were potentially informative for population genetics analyses. Of these markers, we screened 60 loci using five individuals, directly sequenced several amplicons to confirm their identity, and then used eight loci to score allele sizes in 64 G. alternans individuals originating from five islands. A number of these individuals were sampled using non-lethal methods, demonstrating the efficacy of non-destructive molecular sampling in amphibian research. Although two loci satisfied our criteria as diploid, neutrally evolving loci with the statistical power to detect population structure, our success in identifying reliable loci was very low. Additionally, we discovered some issues with primer redundancy and differences between Illumina and Sanger sequences that suggest some Illumina-inferred loci are invalid. We investigated cross-species utility for eight loci and found most could be successfully amplified, sequenced and aligned across other species and genera of caecilians from the Seychelles. Thus, our study in part supported the validity of using PALFINDER with unassembled reads for microsatellite discovery within and across species, but importantly identified major limitations to applying this approach to small datasets (ca. 1 million reads) and loci with small tandem repeat sizes.


Ecology of Freshwater Fish | 2008

Evidence For Strong Genetic Structure in a Regionally Important, Highly Vagile Cyprinid (Henicorhynchus lobatus) in the Mekong River Basin

David A. Hurwood; Eleanor A. S. Adamson; Peter B. Mather


Archive | 2011

PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS OF MALAYAN AND MALAGASY PYGMY SHREWS OF THE GENUS SUNCUS (SORICOMORPHA: SORICIDAE) INFERRED FROM MITOCHONDRIAL CYTOCHROME B GENE SEQUENCES

Rosli Hashim; Manuel Ruedi; Hasmahzaiti Omar; Eleanor A. S. Adamson; Subha Bhassu; S.M. Goodman; V. Soarimalala


Zootaxa | 2017

Channa pseudomarulius , a valid species of snakehead from the Western Ghats region of peninsular India (Teleostei: Channidae), with comments on Ophicephalus grandinosus , O. theophrasti and O. leucopunctatus

Ralf Britz; Eleanor A. S. Adamson; Rajeev Raghavan; Anvar Ali; Neelesh Dahanukar


Freshwater Fisheries Ecology | 2015

Molecular ecology and stock identification

Eleanor A. S. Adamson; David A. Hurwood


Science & Engineering Faculty | 2012

Insights into historical drainage evolution based on the phylogeography of the chevron snakehead fish (Channa striata) in the Mekong Basin

Eleanor A. S. Adamson; David A. Hurwood; Peter B. Mather


Archive | 2010

Influence of historical landscapes, drainage evolution and ecological traits on patterns of genetic diversity in Southeast Asian freshwater snakehead fishes

Eleanor A. S. Adamson

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David A. Hurwood

Queensland University of Technology

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Peter B. Mather

Queensland University of Technology

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Ralf Britz

Natural History Museum

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Andrew M. Baker

Queensland University of Technology

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Anvar Ali

Kerala University of Fisheries and Ocean Studies

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Neelesh Dahanukar

Indian Institute of Science

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Rajeev Raghavan

Kerala University of Fisheries and Ocean Studies

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