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Molecular phylogeny of the bamboo sharks (Chiloscyllium spp.).


ABSTRACT: Chiloscyllium, commonly called bamboo shark, can be found inhabiting the waters of the Indo-West Pacific around East Asian countries such as Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, Singapore, and Indonesia. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List has categorized them as nearly threatened sharks out of their declining population status due to overexploitation. A molecular study was carried out to portray the systematic relationships within Chiloscyllium species using 12S rRNA and cytochrome b gene sequences. Maximum parsimony and Bayesian were used to reconstruct their phylogeny trees. A total of 381?bp sequences' lengths were successfully aligned in the 12S rRNA region, with 41?bp sites being parsimony-informative. In the cytochrome b region, a total of 1120?bp sites were aligned, with 352 parsimony-informative characters. All analyses yield phylogeny trees on which C. indicum has close relationships with C. plagiosum. C. punctatum is sister taxon to both C. indicum and C. plagiosum while C. griseum and C. hasseltii formed their own clade as sister taxa. These Chiloscyllium classifications can be supported by some morphological characters (lateral dermal ridges on the body, coloring patterns, and appearance of hypobranchials and basibranchial plate) that can clearly be used to differentiate each species.

SUBMITTER: Masstor NH 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4071782 | biostudies-literature | 2014

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Molecular phylogeny of the bamboo sharks (Chiloscyllium spp.).

Masstor Noor Haslina NH   Samat Abdullah A   Nor Shukor Md SM   Md-Zain Badrul Munir BM  

BioMed research international 20140611


Chiloscyllium, commonly called bamboo shark, can be found inhabiting the waters of the Indo-West Pacific around East Asian countries such as Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, Singapore, and Indonesia. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List has categorized them as nearly threatened sharks out of their declining population status due to overexploitation. A molecular study was carried out to portray the systematic relationships within Chiloscyllium species using 12S rRNA and  ...[more]

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