@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19760,
author = {Mitsuaki Sutou and Toshihide Kato and Motomi Ito},
title = {Recent discoveries of armyworms in Japan and their species identification using DNA barcoding},
year = {2011},
keywords = {Diptera, Sciaridae, Armyworms, DNA barcode, Japan},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Molecular Ecology Resources},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Long columns of migrating larval sciarid armyworms were discovered in central and northern Japan, specifically Kanagawa, Gunma, Miyagi and Akita prefectures, as well as Hokkaido. This is the first examination of armyworms in East Asia. In Europe, armyworms have been identified as Sciara militaris, belonging to the family Sciaridae (sciarid flies or black fungus gnats), by rearing them to adulthood. In Japan, we were unable to obtain live samples for rearing; therefore, DNA barcodes were obtained from the samples of armyworms collected in the Gunma and Miyagi prefectures. The DNA barcodes were compared with those obtained from the following samples: pupae of S. militaris from UK, adults of S. kitakamiensis, S. humeralis, S. hemerobioides, S. thoracica, S. helvola, and S. melanostyla from Japan, and adults of one undescribed Sciara species from Malaysia. Neighbour-joining, maximum parsimony, and maximum likelihood analyses revealed that the armyworms discovered in Japan are S. kitakamiensis. Although adults of this species have been recorded in several locations in Japan, this is the first report of migrating larval armyworms. DNA barcodes were effectively used to link different life stages of this species. The average intraspecific and interspecific pairwise genetic distances of the genus Sciara were 0.3% and 12.6%, respectively. The present study illustrates that DNA barcodes are an effective means of identifying sciarid flies in Japan.}
}
Citation for Study 11576
Citation title:
"Recent discoveries of armyworms in Japan and their species identification using DNA barcoding".
Study name:
"Recent discoveries of armyworms in Japan and their species identification using DNA barcoding".
This study is part of submission 11566
(Status: Published).
Citation
Sutou M., Kato T., & Ito M. 2011. Recent discoveries of armyworms in Japan and their species identification using DNA barcoding. Molecular Ecology Resources, .
Authors
-
Sutou M.
(submitter)
-
Kato T.
-
Ito M.
Abstract
Long columns of migrating larval sciarid armyworms were discovered in central and northern Japan, specifically Kanagawa, Gunma, Miyagi and Akita prefectures, as well as Hokkaido. This is the first examination of armyworms in East Asia. In Europe, armyworms have been identified as Sciara militaris, belonging to the family Sciaridae (sciarid flies or black fungus gnats), by rearing them to adulthood. In Japan, we were unable to obtain live samples for rearing; therefore, DNA barcodes were obtained from the samples of armyworms collected in the Gunma and Miyagi prefectures. The DNA barcodes were compared with those obtained from the following samples: pupae of S. militaris from UK, adults of S. kitakamiensis, S. humeralis, S. hemerobioides, S. thoracica, S. helvola, and S. melanostyla from Japan, and adults of one undescribed Sciara species from Malaysia. Neighbour-joining, maximum parsimony, and maximum likelihood analyses revealed that the armyworms discovered in Japan are S. kitakamiensis. Although adults of this species have been recorded in several locations in Japan, this is the first report of migrating larval armyworms. DNA barcodes were effectively used to link different life stages of this species. The average intraspecific and interspecific pairwise genetic distances of the genus Sciara were 0.3% and 12.6%, respectively. The present study illustrates that DNA barcodes are an effective means of identifying sciarid flies in Japan.
Keywords
Diptera, Sciaridae, Armyworms, DNA barcode, Japan
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S11576
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19760,
author = {Mitsuaki Sutou and Toshihide Kato and Motomi Ito},
title = {Recent discoveries of armyworms in Japan and their species identification using DNA barcoding},
year = {2011},
keywords = {Diptera, Sciaridae, Armyworms, DNA barcode, Japan},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Molecular Ecology Resources},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Long columns of migrating larval sciarid armyworms were discovered in central and northern Japan, specifically Kanagawa, Gunma, Miyagi and Akita prefectures, as well as Hokkaido. This is the first examination of armyworms in East Asia. In Europe, armyworms have been identified as Sciara militaris, belonging to the family Sciaridae (sciarid flies or black fungus gnats), by rearing them to adulthood. In Japan, we were unable to obtain live samples for rearing; therefore, DNA barcodes were obtained from the samples of armyworms collected in the Gunma and Miyagi prefectures. The DNA barcodes were compared with those obtained from the following samples: pupae of S. militaris from UK, adults of S. kitakamiensis, S. humeralis, S. hemerobioides, S. thoracica, S. helvola, and S. melanostyla from Japan, and adults of one undescribed Sciara species from Malaysia. Neighbour-joining, maximum parsimony, and maximum likelihood analyses revealed that the armyworms discovered in Japan are S. kitakamiensis. Although adults of this species have been recorded in several locations in Japan, this is the first report of migrating larval armyworms. DNA barcodes were effectively used to link different life stages of this species. The average intraspecific and interspecific pairwise genetic distances of the genus Sciara were 0.3% and 12.6%, respectively. The present study illustrates that DNA barcodes are an effective means of identifying sciarid flies in Japan.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 19760
AU - Sutou,Mitsuaki
AU - Kato,Toshihide
AU - Ito,Motomi
T1 - Recent discoveries of armyworms in Japan and their species identification using DNA barcoding
PY - 2011
KW - Diptera
KW - Sciaridae
KW - Armyworms
KW - DNA barcode
KW - Japan
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - Long columns of migrating larval sciarid armyworms were discovered in central and northern Japan, specifically Kanagawa, Gunma, Miyagi and Akita prefectures, as well as Hokkaido. This is the first examination of armyworms in East Asia. In Europe, armyworms have been identified as Sciara militaris, belonging to the family Sciaridae (sciarid flies or black fungus gnats), by rearing them to adulthood. In Japan, we were unable to obtain live samples for rearing; therefore, DNA barcodes were obtained from the samples of armyworms collected in the Gunma and Miyagi prefectures. The DNA barcodes were compared with those obtained from the following samples: pupae of S. militaris from UK, adults of S. kitakamiensis, S. humeralis, S. hemerobioides, S. thoracica, S. helvola, and S. melanostyla from Japan, and adults of one undescribed Sciara species from Malaysia. Neighbour-joining, maximum parsimony, and maximum likelihood analyses revealed that the armyworms discovered in Japan are S. kitakamiensis. Although adults of this species have been recorded in several locations in Japan, this is the first report of migrating larval armyworms. DNA barcodes were effectively used to link different life stages of this species. The average intraspecific and interspecific pairwise genetic distances of the genus Sciara were 0.3% and 12.6%, respectively. The present study illustrates that DNA barcodes are an effective means of identifying sciarid flies in Japan.
L3 -
JF - Molecular Ecology Resources
VL -
IS -
ER -