ZooKeys (Dec 2013)

DNA barcoding and the differentiation between North American and West European Phormia regina (Diptera, Calliphoridae, Chrysomyinae)

  • Kurt Jordaens,
  • Gontran Sonet,
  • Yves Braet,
  • Marc de Meyer,
  • Thierry Backeljau,
  • Frankie Goovaerts,
  • Luc Bourguignon,
  • Stijn Desmyter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.365.6202
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 365, no. 0
pp. 149 – 174

Abstract

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Phormia regina (the black fly) is a common Holarctic blow fly species which serves as a primary indicator taxon to estimate minimal post mortem intervals. It is also a major research model in physiological and neurological studies on insect feeding. Previous studies have shown a sequence divergence of up to 4.3% in the mitochondrial COI gene between W European and N American P. regina populations. Here, we DNA barcoded P. regina specimens from six N American and 17 W European populations and confirmed a mean sequence divergence of ca. 4% between the populations of the two continents, while sequence divergence within each continent was a ten-fold lower. Comparable mean mtDNA sequence divergences were observed for COII (3.7 %) and cyt b (5.3 %), but mean divergence was lower for 16S (0.4–0.6 %). Intercontinental divergence at nuclear DNA was very low (≤ 0.1 % for both 28S and ITS2), and we did not detect any morphological differentiation between N American and W European specimens. Therefore, we consider the strong differentiation at COI, COII and cyt b as intraspecific mtDNA sequence divergence that should be taken into account when using P. regina in forensic casework or experimental research.