by Playfuls Staff |
18th February 2007
At unprecedented levels of difficulty involving highly
biodiverse and continent-sized landscapes, scientists have successfully tested
their ability to identify and DNA "barcode" entire assemblages of
species -- the [more] prelude to a genetic portrait of all animal life on
Earth.
Revealing their results in the UK
journal Molecular Ecology Notes, they report having assembled a genetic
portrait of birdlife in the U.S.
and Canada,
and announce the startling discovery of 15 new genetically distinct species,
nearly indistinguishable to human eyes and ears and consequently overlooked in
centuries of bird studies.
The barcoders also successfully logged the DNA attributes of
87 bat species of Guyana
and reveal six new species, characterized by unique genetic make-up. One of the
new species, a look-alike of Trachops cirrhosus, feasts on frogs.
As well, the scientists report that 14 pairs of North
American bird species with separate identities are in fact DNA twins, two trios
of bird species are DNA triplets, and no less than eight gull species are
virtually DNA identical.
The complementary papers describing the bird and bat
initiatives were authored by researchers from Guelph,
Ottawa and Toronto,
Canada, and from New York City and Washington
D.C., USA.
The bird researchers obtained DNA from "voucher"
specimens in museums, augmented by samples sent in by scores of people. In all,
more than 2,500 specimens were barcoded.
The DNA portrait of 643 bird species, from the Arctic tundra
to the temperate woodlands to the Florida Keys, represents 93 percent of 690
known breeding species in the U.S.
and Canada.
Work continues to collect DNA of the remaining 47 listed North American
species, as well as several more considered extinct, specimens of which exist
in museums.
The work builds on 2004 research which involved only 260
bird species, criticized at the time as too narrow geographically and
taxonomically to prove that bird species can be reliably distinguished through
DNA.
"Now with the vast majority -- 93 to 94 percent -- of
birds on the continent barcoded it's hard to argue that barcoding might work
for the easy stuff but miss the difficult cases of closely related taxa,"
says Dr. Paul Hebert of the Biodiversity Institute of Ontario, Guelph
University, Canada, who co-authored both the bird and bat papers.
"People have watched birds for so long we might think
every different tweet has been heard, every different color form
observed," says Dr. Hebert. However, "there are a number of cases of
deep genetic divergences within what are currently called single species,"
he says.
The "cryptic species" are those with unique DNA
barcodes but differences of song and plummage so subtle as to make them
virtually indistinguishable from some other species. They are typically
"small brown ground-dwelling shrubbery birds that don't attract a lot of
human attention."
Even though birds may appear very similar to human
observers, a species with a distinct DNA barcode very rarely interbreeds; they
literally find birds of a feather as mates. Also, the fauna (birds and bats)
newly distinguished by virtue of unique DNA do not yet have unique names. That
issue and process is the subject of scientific discussion and debate.
"Did we find concordance between barcode results and
conventional taxonomy? The answer is, resoundingly, yes. In 95 percent of
cases, entities recognized as species are barcode distinct," adds Dr.
Hebert.
People who put tiny bands on birds to help track migrations
contributed samples for the study. Banders are extremely good at identifying
species "but even they can't always identify a bird in the hand,"
says Dr. Hebert. "In such cases, they appreciate having a barcode record
to identify with certainty the bird they banded."
Dr. Stoeckle of Rockefeller
University says the world
recognizes about 10,000 bird species today and predicts that, at a global
scale, DNA barcoding will distinguish at least 1,000 potential new species. The
researchers hope to complete an all-bird DNA inventory by 2011.
Given the continent's legions of bird specialists, he says
he was surprised by the extent of "hidden diversity" revealed in North America, and by the clear DNA distinctions between
species.
Dr. Stoeckle cautions that "some pairs of listed
species now shown to be DNA twins may be relatively young species and prove
different over time." As well, he notes, there is no universal scientific
agreement on what defines a species.
"Wouldn't you think we'd have all of the world's 5,500
mammals identified by now? The scientific community has been at it for 250
years," says Dr. Hebert. Roughly 1,100 or 20 percent of the world's 5,500
mammals are bats.
Adding six new bat species to the 87 surveyed from Guyana is a
surprisingly high percentage, he notes. In all, some 840 bat specimens were
barcoded.
"We wanted to give barcoding the toughest test
possible. The bats of Guyana
have been the subject of intensive taxonomic work and yet we found we could recognize
100 percent of the surveyed species and discovered a number of overlooked
bats."
Stray hairs could tell the kind of bats in your belfry -- or
which bats are bumping into wind turbines, whose blades whack thousands of the
animals each year, he added.
Barcoding can identify a species from bits and pieces. When
fully established, the barcode database will help quickly identify undesirable
animal or plant material in food and detect regulated species in the
marketplace.
Barcoding will help reconstruct food cycles by identifying
fragments in stomachs and assist plant science by identifying roots sampled
from soil layers. A standardized library of barcodes will enable more people to
identify species -- whether abundant or rare, native or invasive -- engendering
appreciation of biodiversity locally and globally.
The importance of this work to conservation is particularly
critical, adds Dr. Hebert. The Solitary Sandpiper shorebird, its habitat
increasingly under pressure from land development and climate change, was not
known previously to have two forms, yet their DNA reveals two distinct groups
split about 2.5 million years ago.
"How can you develop strategies to preserve highly
different genetic entities if you don't know they're there? Our work is providing
the first molecular evidence of some of these splits."
The work with birds and bats also helps aviation and is
supported in part by the U.S. Federal Aviation Authority and U.S. Air Force.
According to Carla Dove of the Smithsonian Institution:
"Knowing which birds are most often struck, and the timing, altitude and
routes of their migrations, could avert some of the thousands of annual
collisions between birds and aircraft, military and civilian."
In a few years, field researchers, indeed many interested
citizens, could employ hand-held DNA devices for nearly instant species
identification. Says Dr. Hebert: "For cases where it is not convenient to
identify species based on shape, sound and color, even non-experts could
identify them based on DNA strings."
Once miniaturized, the many potential uses of quick DNA
barcoding embrace food and agriculture, forestry and security, including
certification of species for market, controlling pest animals and preventing
invasions of species via international trade. A DNA barcoder could name the
vegetables in your soup.
Perhaps the biggest surprise is that DNA barcoding works as
well as it does, that a relatively short code of genes distinguishes species so
clearly and there isn't more blurring between species, says Dr. Stoeckle.
Barcoding has prompted speculation and theories about
mechanisms that strip variation out of species and keep them sharply distinct
-- periodic "selective sweeps" -- and the reasons behind them.
"This work is raising questions about how evolution
works and what species are," he says.
So far, the Barcode of Life Data Systems
(http://www.barcodinglife.org) has catalogued more than 25,000 species of all
types, and over 200,000 individual records; both numbers more than doubled in
the past year. Whenever possible, museum specimens have been used to create the
DNA barcode reference library, enabling scientists to re-check and verify any
puzzling results.
The Smithsonian has barcoded an Ivory-billed woodpecker
preserved from decades ago, "so if birdwatchers now find a fresh feather,
we could strongly confirm the bird still survives," says Dr. Hebert.
The researchers are looking to raise US $100 million to
create 10 million records of 500,000 animal species by 2014.
Says Dr. Hebert: "What it will mean effectively is that
researchers will find a barcode linked to just about anything encountered
anywhere on the planet. By 2014 I think you can count on having a functional
barcode library linking barcodes to the binomial names that link to the
accumulated knowledge about them. And I think you can count on having a
handheld device.
"Our job is to reveal how many species there are on the
planet and provide really simple tools to tell one species from another."
And difference between Bat and Robin? It depends on the bat
in question, but the Vampire Bat, a mammal, and the American Robin, a bird,
differ at 135 of the 648 barcode positions, about 10 times the typical
difference between a species and its nearest neighbor.