2001
DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a003717
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Phylogenetic Signal and its Decay in Mitochondrial SSU and LSU rRNA Gene Fragments of Anisoptera

Abstract: The phylogeny of Anisoptera, dragonflies in the strict sense, has proven to be notoriously difficult to resolve. Based on morphological characters, several recent publications dealing with the phylogeny of dragonflies proposed contradicting inter- and intrafamily relationships. We explored phylogenetic information content of mitochondrial large-subunit (LSU) and small-subunit (SSU) ribosomal gene fragments for these systematic problems. Starting at published universal primers, we developed primer sets suitable… Show more

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Cited by 67 publications
(76 citation statements)
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“…This result is in accordance with Misof et al, (2001) and Eisuke and Etiiti (2006) who experimented higher taxonomic levels of other insect groups with 16S rDNA. The number of base substitutions per site from analysis between sequences were among the ingroup taxa.…”
Section: Fig 1 Saturation Plots Of the Number Of Substitutions For supporting
confidence: 92%
“…This result is in accordance with Misof et al, (2001) and Eisuke and Etiiti (2006) who experimented higher taxonomic levels of other insect groups with 16S rDNA. The number of base substitutions per site from analysis between sequences were among the ingroup taxa.…”
Section: Fig 1 Saturation Plots Of the Number Of Substitutions For supporting
confidence: 92%
“…Future studies should make use of the advances in the understanding of the phylogenetic relationships of odonates (e.g. Misof et al, 2001;Rehn, 2003;Dumont et al, 2005), which along with the unique diversity of SSD in this insect group (e.g. Anholt et al, 1991;Andersson, 1994), provide an excellent opportunity to test and understand the selective processes that shape SSD in animals.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Genetic and comparative genomic studies on range shift, expansion, and adaptive potential of this species are of great interest to further elucidate the impact of global change on flying insects. To date for A. imperator, a panel of 10 nuclear microsatellite loci and partial mitochondrial genes (cox1, nad1, and both rRNAs) were established so far to serve in various phylogenetic studies (Misof et al 2001;Hadrys et al 2007;Fleck et al 2008;Rach et al 2008;Bergmann et al 2013). To consequently proceed towards a comparative genomic approach one first step is the unravelling and comparison of mitogenomes, e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%