Sarah Pruski’s research while affiliated with Texas A&M University at Galveston and other places

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Publications (2)


Cryptic species in time and space: anassessment of cryptic diversity withineight nominal species of Hydrozoa(Cnidaria)
  • Article
  • Full-text available

August 2023

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148 Reads

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3 Citations

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Sarah Pruski

Sampling in multiple localities, coupled with molecular barcoding, has shown that nominal species with wide geographical distribution often harbour local cryptic species in allopatry. Cryptic species in sympatry, however, can be easily missed if they have different seasonality, because they can be identified only through long-term frequent sampling (i.e. sampling through time of the same species in the same location). This is especially true in planktonic invertebrates that exhibit strong seasonality. By integrating mitochondrial 16S sequences of eight species of Hydrozoa (Cnidaria) collected weekly for a year in one Gulf of Mexico region, with sequences gathered globally, we investigate the presence of cryptic species within a temporal gradient (regionally) and on a spatial (worldwide) scale. We find that eight species of Hydrozoa are composed of 28 cryptic species, with 16 of them appearing in sympatry but with non-overlapping seasonality. The high number of sympatric cryptic species could only be discovered through extensive and prolonged regional sampling efforts. The bi-dimensional cryptic diversity (in time and space) highlighted in this study is essential for understanding processes of evolution, biogeography dispersal in the sea, and for more realistic biodiversity assessments.

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Figure 1. Map of the Bocas del Toro archipelago, with sampling localities.
Table 1 . Samples collected during the 2015 Hydrozoa workshop held in Bocas del Toro, Panama. Date of collections, sample ID, species identified, type of fixative used for preservation (ethanol or formalin), GenBank accession number, and location within the Bocas del Toro archipelago are reported. In the table N = No, Y = Yes.
Table 1 . (Continued).
Table 2 . (Continued).
An integrative identification guide to the Hydrozoa (Cnidaria) of Bocas del Toro, Panama

July 2018

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804 Reads

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10 Citations

Neotropical Biodiversity

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Sarah Pruski

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This work is the first attempt to assess the biodiversity of the Hydrozoa in the Archipiélago de Bocas del Toro (Panamá, Caribbean Sea) using morphology and molecular taxonomy, and to produce field identification tools to help future identification and monitoring efforts in the area. We sampled, identified, vouchered, and barcoded 112 specimens of Hydrozoa from shallow coastal waters (0–22 m depth) in the Archipiélago de Bocas del Toro. The specimens belong to 70 taxa, of which 53 were identified at the species level, and 17 were identified at the genus or family level. We produced 64 sequences of the large ribosomal subunit of the mitochondrial RNA (mt lsu-rRNA, 16S), the genetic marker generally used for barcoding Hydrozoa. We updated the local checklist that now comprises 118 species, and produced 87 detailed taxon identification tables that display species descriptions augmented with pictures, geographic distribution (worldwide and in Bocas del Toro), GenBank accession numbers for the 16S mitochondrial gene, and a synopsis of the families they belong to.

Citations (2)


... The ribosomal mitochondrial 16S rDNA (16S) gene has also been proposed and used as an alternative or complement to COI in DNA barcoding projects. The gene 16S allows higher amplification success across taxa than COI alone since it is a more conserved region, and in many taxa, 16S does not underestimate species diversity [38,48]. However, taxonomic and sequence contamination errors, including pseudogenes, in public databases can lead to species misidentification [10,[49][50][51]. ...

Reference:

Cryptic diversity patterns of subterranean estuaries
Cryptic species in time and space: anassessment of cryptic diversity withineight nominal species of Hydrozoa(Cnidaria)

... (For interpretation of the references to color in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the Web version of this article.) 2021; Ellison et al., 2022;Miglietta et al., 2018;Torati et al., 2011). In contrast, fish diversity and abundance are noticeably lower inside Bahía Almirante than at many other Caribbean sites, with somewhat more typical fish faunas evident at the shallowest sites and the exposed sites outside the bay, which also have the most intact reef (Dominici-Arosemena and Wolff, 2005). ...

An integrative identification guide to the Hydrozoa (Cnidaria) of Bocas del Toro, Panama

Neotropical Biodiversity