Seminar Series 2005
DNA barcodes and application of identification of bivalve larvae
Dr Jonathan Geller
Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, California
Identification of invertebrate larvae in natural plankton
samples is notoriously difficult because complete life cycles
for most species are not described. This difficulty in turn
hampers ecological and environmental studies of benthic
communities because variation in larval supply cannot be
quantified. We investigated the use of DNA markers to identify
larvae of five bivalve species in the waters within and
near Morro Bay, California. Mitochondrial Cytochrome oxidase
subunit I (COI) has been promoted as a universally applicable
barcode for biodiversity studies. We sequenced COI in these
five species and in congeners suspected to co-occur in our
plankton samples. Contrary to expectation, COI sequences
did not resolve monophyletic group corresponding to recognized
species boundaries, indicating that COI was not appropriate
for design of species-specific DNA markers. In contrast,
groups within phylogenetic trees based on mitochondrial
Cytochrome oxidase b corresponded to expected species boundaries,
and we therefore experimented with several approaches for
sequence detection to apply to our plankton samples. We
present results of molecular analysis of a subset of our
complete plankton sampling program and demonstrate the application
of "DNA barcodes" in an environmental study. In
general, our experience suggests caution in the use of a
single locus in barcode projects. I will also briefly discuss
the aims of my present visit to the Gump Station, which
is to explore the feasibility of functional genomic approaches
to ecological and evolutionary research at relatively remote
field stations.

