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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth Evans-Illidge is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth Evans-Illidge.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Phylogeny drives large scale patterns in Australian marine bioactivity and provides a new chemical ecology rationale for future biodiscovery.

Elizabeth Evans-Illidge; Murray Logan; Jason Doyle; Jane Fromont; Christopher N. Battershill; Gavin Ericson; Carsten W. Wolff; Andrew Muirhead; Phillip Kearns; David Abdo; Stuart Kininmonth; Lyndon E. Llewellyn

Twenty-five years of Australian marine bioresources collecting and research by the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) has explored the breadth of latitudinally and longitudinally diverse marine habitats that comprise Australia’s ocean territory. The resulting AIMS Bioresources Library and associated relational database integrate biodiversity with bioactivity data, and these resources were mined to retrospectively assess biogeographic, taxonomic and phylogenetic patterns in cytotoxic, antimicrobial, and central nervous system (CNS)-protective bioactivity. While the bioassays used were originally chosen to be indicative of pharmaceutically relevant bioactivity, the results have qualified ecological relevance regarding secondary metabolism. In general, metazoan phyla along the deuterostome phylogenetic pathway (eg to Chordata) and their ancestors (eg Porifera and Cnidaria) had higher percentages of bioactive samples in the assays examined. While taxonomy at the phylum level and higher-order phylogeny groupings helped account for observed trends, taxonomy to genus did not resolve the trends any further. In addition, the results did not identify any biogeographic bioactivity hotspots that correlated with biodiversity hotspots. We conclude with a hypothesis that high-level phylogeny, and therefore the metabolic machinery available to an organism, is a major determinant of bioactivity, while habitat diversity and ecological circumstance are possible drivers in the activation of this machinery and bioactive secondary metabolism. This study supports the strategy of targeting phyla from the deuterostome lineage (including ancestral phyla) from biodiverse marine habitats and ecological niches, in future biodiscovery, at least that which is focused on vertebrate (including human) health.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Diversity of Marine-Derived Fungal Cultures Exposed by DNA Barcodes: The Algorithm Matters.

Nikos Andreakis; Lone Høj; Philip Kearns; Michael R. Hall; Gavin Ericson; Rose Cobb; Benjamin R. Gordon; Elizabeth Evans-Illidge

Marine fungi are an understudied group of eukaryotic microorganisms characterized by unresolved genealogies and unstable classification. Whereas DNA barcoding via the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) provides a robust and rapid tool for fungal species delineation, accurate classification of fungi is often arduous given the large number of partial or unknown barcodes and misidentified isolates deposited in public databases. This situation is perpetuated by a paucity of cultivable fungal strains available for phylogenetic research linked to these data sets. We analyze ITS barcodes produced from a subsample (290) of 1781 cultured isolates of marine-derived fungi in the Bioresources Library located at the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS). Our analysis revealed high levels of under-explored fungal diversity. The majority of isolates were ascomycetes including representatives of the subclasses Eurotiomycetidae, Hypocreomycetidae, Sordariomycetidae, Pleosporomycetidae, Dothideomycetidae, Xylariomycetidae and Saccharomycetidae. The phylum Basidiomycota was represented by isolates affiliated with the genera Tritirachium and Tilletiopsis. BLAST searches revealed 26 unknown OTUs and 50 isolates corresponding to previously uncultured, unidentified fungal clones. This study makes a significant addition to the availability of barcoded, culturable marine-derived fungi for detailed future genomic and physiological studies. We also demonstrate the influence of commonly used alignment algorithms and genetic distance measures on the accuracy and comparability of estimating Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) by the automatic barcode gap finder (ABGD) method. Large scale biodiversity screening programs that combine datasets using algorithmic OTU delineation pipelines need to ensure compatible algorithms have been used because the algorithm matters.


Marine Drugs | 2008

A Tropical Marine Microbial Natural Products Geobibliography as an Example of Desktop Exploration of Current Research Using Web Visualisation Tools

Joydeep Mukherjee; Lyndon E. Llewellyn; Elizabeth Evans-Illidge

Microbial marine biodiscovery is a recent scientific endeavour developing at a time when information and other technologies are also undergoing great technical strides. Global visualisation of datasets is now becoming available to the world through powerful and readily available software such as Worldwind™, ArcGIS Explorer™ and Google Earth™. Overlaying custom information upon these tools is within the hands of every scientist and more and more scientific organisations are making data available that can also be integrated into these global visualisation tools. The integrated global view that these tools enable provides a powerful desktop exploration tool. Here we demonstrate the value of this approach to marine microbial biodiscovery by developing a geobibliography that incorporates citations on tropical and near-tropical marine microbial natural products research with Google Earth™ and additional ancillary global data sets. The tools and software used are all readily available and the reader is able to use and install the material described in this article.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Recruitment Variability of Coral Reef Sessile Communities of the Far North Great Barrier Reef.

Heidi M. Luter; Alan Duckworth; Carsten W. Wolff; Elizabeth Evans-Illidge; Steve W Whalan

One of the key components in assessing marine sessile organism demography is determining recruitment patterns to benthic habitats. An analysis of serially deployed recruitment tiles across depth (6 and 12 m), seasons (summer and winter) and space (meters to kilometres) was used to quantify recruitment assemblage structure (abundance and percent cover) of corals, sponges, ascidians, algae and other sessile organisms from the northern sector of the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). Polychaetes were most abundant on recruitment titles, reaching almost 50% of total recruitment, yet covered <5% of each tile. In contrast, mean abundances of sponges, ascidians, algae, and bryozoans combined was generally less than 20% of total recruitment, with percentage cover ranging between 15–30% per tile. Coral recruitment was very low, with <1 recruit per tile identified. A hierarchal analysis of variation over a range of spatial and temporal scales showed significant spatio-temporal variation in recruitment patterns, but the highest variability occurred at the lowest spatial scale examined (1 m—among tiles). Temporal variability in recruitment of both numbers of taxa and percentage cover was also evident across both summer and winter. Recruitment across depth varied for some taxonomic groups like algae, sponges and ascidians, with greatest differences in summer. This study presents some of the first data on benthic recruitment within the northern GBR and provides a greater understanding of population ecology for coral reefs.


Marine Biotechnology | 2011

Bacterial community dynamics in the marine sponge Rhopaloeides odorabile under in situ and ex situ cultivation

Nicole S. Webster; Rose Cobb; Rochelle M. Soo; Shelley L. Anthony; Christopher N. Battershill; Steve W Whalan; Elizabeth Evans-Illidge


Archive | 2007

Developing methods for commercially farming bath sponges in tropical Australia

Alan Duckworth; Carsten Wolff; Elizabeth Evans-Illidge


Archive | 2007

Exploring the potential of bath sponge aquaculture in Torres Strait

Alan Duckworth; Carsten Wolff; Elizabeth Evans-Illidge; John Morris; Samson Lowatta; Simon Naawi; Paul Lowatta; Patterson Mosby


Diversity | 2017

Diversity and Bioactivity of Marine Bacteria Associated with the Sponges Candidaspongia flabellata and Rhopaloeides odorabile from the Great Barrier Reef in Australia

Candice Brinkmann; Philip Kearns; Elizabeth Evans-Illidge; D. Kurtbӧke


Archive | 2009

Farming bath sponges in tropical Australia

Alan Duckworth; Carsten Wolff; Elizabeth Evans-Illidge


Archive | 2007

Marine natural products discovery in Australia: From reef to royalty, and the pursuit of Convention for Biological Diversity (CBD) compliance

Elizabeth Evans-Illidge; Christopher N. Battershill

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Carsten Wolff

Australian Institute of Marine Science

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Christopher N. Battershill

Australian Institute of Marine Science

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Alan Duckworth

National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research

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Carsten W. Wolff

Australian Institute of Marine Science

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Lyndon E. Llewellyn

Australian Institute of Marine Science

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Richard Brinkman

Australian Institute of Marine Science

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Alan R. Duckworth

Australian Institute of Marine Science

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Craig Steinberg

Australian Institute of Marine Science

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David G. Bourne

Australian Institute of Marine Science

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Gavin Ericson

Australian Institute of Marine Science

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