DNA Barcoding and Species Boundary Delimitation of Selected Species of Chinese Acridoidea (Orthoptera: Caelifera)
Published 2013 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
DNA Barcoding and Species Boundary Delimitation of Selected Species of Chinese Acridoidea (Orthoptera: Caelifera)
Authors
Keywords
Haplotypes, Species delimitation, Phylogenetic analysis, DNA barcoding, Taxonomy, Sequence analysis, Phylogenetics, DNA sequence analysis
Journal
PLoS One
Volume 8, Issue 12, Pages e82400
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Online
2013-12-21
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0082400
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Alignment-free analysis of barcode sequences by means of compression-based methods
- (2013) Massimo La Rosa et al. BMC BIOINFORMATICS
- Identifying Insects with Incomplete DNA Barcode Libraries, African Fruit Flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) as a Test Case
- (2012) Massimiliano Virgilio et al. PLoS One
- A New Method for Species Identification via Protein-Coding and Non-Coding DNA Barcodes by Combining Machine Learning with Bioinformatic Methods
- (2012) Ai-bing Zhang et al. PLoS One
- Phylogenetic Reconstruction and DNA Barcoding for Closely Related Pine Moth Species (Dendrolimus) in China with Multiple Gene Markers
- (2012) Qing-Yan Dai et al. PLoS One
- Potential efficacy of mitochondrial genes for animal DNA barcoding: a case study using eutherian mammals
- (2011) Arong Luo et al. BMC GENOMICS
- A fuzzy-set-theory-based approach to analyse species membership in DNA barcoding
- (2011) A.-B. ZHANG et al. MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
- ABGD, Automatic Barcode Gap Discovery for primary species delimitation
- (2011) N. PUILLANDRE et al. MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
- Comparative performances of DNA barcoding across insect orders
- (2010) Massimiliano Virgilio et al. BMC BIOINFORMATICS
- Performance of criteria for selecting evolutionary models in phylogenetics: a comprehensive study based on simulated datasets
- (2010) Arong Luo et al. BMC EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
- Molecular phylogeny of Pamphagidae (Acridoidea, Orthoptera) from China based on mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase II sequences
- (2010) Dao-Chuan Zhang et al. Insect Science
- The phylogeny of Orthoptera inferred from mtDNA and description of Elimaea cheni (Tettigoniidae: Phaneropterinae) mitogenome
- (2010) Zhijun Zhou et al. Journal of Genetics and Genomics
- New method for comparing DNA primary sequences based on a discrimination measure
- (2010) Jie Feng et al. JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY
- Assessing the effects of primer specificity on eliminating numt coamplification in DNA barcoding: a case study from Orthoptera (Arthropoda: Insecta)
- (2010) MATTHEW J. MOULTON et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
- Evolutionary history and taxonomy of a short-horned grasshopper subfamily: The Melanoplinae (Orthoptera: Acrididae)
- (2010) Ioana C. Chintauan-Marquier et al. MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION
- Mitochondrial Cox1 Sequence Data Reliably Uncover Patterns of Insect Diversity But Suffer from High Lineage-Idiosyncratic Error Rates
- (2010) Lars Hendrich et al. PLoS One
- In the dark in a large urban park: DNA barcodes illuminate cryptic and introduced moth species
- (2009) Jeremy R. deWaard et al. BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION
- Rapid DNA barcoding analysis of large datasets using the composition vector method
- (2009) Ka Chu et al. BMC BIOINFORMATICS
- DNA barcode analysis: a comparison of phylogenetic and statistical classification methods
- (2009) Frederic Austerlitz et al. BMC BIOINFORMATICS
- Efficient alignment-free DNA barcode analytics
- (2009) Pavel Kuksa et al. BMC BIOINFORMATICS
- Molecular evidence for the identity of the Magenta petrel
- (2009) HAYLEY A. LAWRENCE et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
- DNA barcoding a regional bee (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) fauna and its potential for ecological studies
- (2009) CORY S. SHEFFIELD et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
- DNA barcodes to identify species and explore diversity in the Adelgidae (Insecta: Hemiptera: Aphidoidea)
- (2009) R. G. FOOTTIT et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
- Identification of Nearctic black flies using DNA barcodes (Diptera: Simuliidae)
- (2009) JULIO RIVERA et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
- Mitochondrial DNA barcoding detects some species that are real, and some that are not
- (2009) KANCHON K. DASMAHAPATRA et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
- Molecular taxonomy and species delimitation in Andean Schistocerca (Orthoptera: Acrididae)
- (2009) Amir Yassin et al. MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION
- Estimating sample sizes for DNA barcoding
- (2009) A.B. Zhang et al. MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION
- Accelerated Species Inventory on Madagascar Using Coalescent-Based Models of Species Delineation
- (2009) Michael T. Monaghan et al. SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
- Identification of ‘extinct’ freshwater mussel species using DNA barcoding
- (2008) DAVID C. CAMPBELL et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
- BPSI2.0: a C/C++ interface program for species identification via DNA barcoding with a BP-neural network by calling the Matlab engine
- (2008) A. B. ZHANG et al. Molecular Ecology Resources
- Many species in one: DNA barcoding overestimates the number of species when nuclear mitochondrial pseudogenes are coamplified
- (2008) H. Song et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Inferring Species Membership Using DNA Sequences with Back-Propagation Neural Networks
- (2008) A. B. Zhang et al. SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
- The Use of Mean Instead of Smallest Interspecific Distances Exaggerates the Size of the “Barcoding Gap” and Leads to Misidentification
- (2008) Rudolf Meier et al. SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
- DNA Barcoding is not enough: mismatch of taxonomy and genealogy in New Zealand grasshoppers (Orthoptera: Acrididae).
- (2007) Steven A. Trewick CLADISTICS
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationPublish scientific posters with Peeref
Peeref publishes scientific posters from all research disciplines. Our Diamond Open Access policy means free access to content and no publication fees for authors.
Learn More