1 / 9

Tephritid Barcoding Initiative

Tephritid Barcoding Initiative. Tephritid Barcoding Initiative. CBoL obtained funding from Sloan Foundation to support a “Demonstrator System” Mid-size taxon, reasonable taxonomic knowledge Interested user community Scientists willing to commit to 2-year project

zareh
Télécharger la présentation

Tephritid Barcoding Initiative

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tephritid Barcoding Initiative

  2. Tephritid Barcoding Initiative • CBoL obtained funding from Sloan Foundation to support a “Demonstrator System” • Mid-size taxon, reasonable taxonomic knowledge • Interested user community • Scientists willing to commit to 2-year project • CBoL approached the mosquito and fruit fly communities to submit proposals (support confirmed September 2006)

  3. Tephritid Barcoding Initiative • Family Tephritidae (>4,000 species, >350 economically important species) • Anastrepha, Bactrocera, Ceratitis, Dacus, Rhagoletis • Morphological keys of adults are available for many pests and congeners • Declining taxonomic expertise • Extensive museum collections

  4. Tephritid Barcoding Initiative • Generate barcode database for 2,000 species (10,000 individuals; use of museum specimens) • Train postdoctoral scholars in morphological and molecular approaches to tephritid systematics • Establish globally-available DNA repository • Develop protocols for queries to DNA barcode database in support of pest management, ecology and taxonomy

  5. Tephritid Barcoding Initiative • Statement of cooperation from >15 major museums • Funding estimate: US$1 million direct costs • Funding from Sloan Foundation, USDA-APHIS, Penn State, Belgian government • Collaboration several Plant Protection Agencies

  6. Tephritid Barcoding Initiative • Slow start: • Funding • Older museum specimens • Current state • Approx 500 specimens sequenced (177 taxa of which 82 EI) • 335 extractions ready for PCR (additional 50 taxa of which 45 EI) • Several acquisitions from museums • Most sequences come from taxa in EI genera: Bactrocera, Dacus, Ceratitis, Anastrepha, Rhagoletis • Large part of sequences come from taxa in species complexes • Aim end of 2007: at least half of EI taxa. • July 2008: all EI taxa

  7. Tephritid Barcoding Initiative • Where it works (African Bactrocera and Dacus) NJ tree K2P

  8. Tephritid Barcoding Initiative • … and where it doesn’t (Ceratitis FAR complex) NJ tree K2P fasciventris anonae rosa (cf. poster at this conference by Virgilio et al.)

  9. Tephritid Barcoding Initiative Contact: Bruce McPheron, Penn State, USA Chair, TBI Steering Committee bam10@psu.edu TBI Coordinators: Allen Norrbom, USDA, USA Marc De Meyer, RMCA, Belgium Steering Committee Members: Karen Armstrong, New Zealand Norman Barr, USA Amnon Freidberg, Israel Ho-Yeon Han, South Korea George Roderick, USA Ian White, UK Presentation Chair and Coordinators, in collaboration with: Karen Armstrong, Peter Kerr, Massimiliano Virgilio

More Related