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?? So what is “biodiversity” ?? An abstract concept ….. “Biodiversity refers to the variety and variability among living organisms and the ecological complexes in which they occur …” (US Congress Office of Technology Assessment, OTA 1987) Different divisions: (3) genetic, species, ecosystem diversities (5) genes, populations, species, assemblages, ecosystem (hierarchical scales) Although based on the definition of “entities”, the concept embraces “processes”. A measurable entity ….. Measuring biodiversity enables to rigorously and empirically test the concepts. There is no way to get a unique measure of biodiversity! The most classical measure of biodiversity combine the # of species, and the evenness or equability of their abundance. A social construct … Biodiversity = nature conservation. Out of its neutral scientific concept, biodiversity is perceived as a value. Species concepts (n / N)2 The world is populated by organisms that form clusters of similar individuals, called species. Speciation is the splitting of populations into different evolutionary independent units. The species is the critical transition level between micro- and macroevolution. There are many different ways of defining species, none of which is able to cover all known organisms. The 2 most important are: 1) the Biological Species Concept of Dobzhansky (1937) and Mayr (1942) –a group of organisms that can mate with each other and produce viable grand-children2) the Phylogenetic Species Concept: a monophyletic group composed of the smallest diagnosable cluster of individual organisms within which there is a parental pattern of ancestry and descent. The PSC brings a historical dimension that does not exist in the BSC. For microbes: everything is everywhere … Species-Area curves (~3000 spp) Finlay 2002 Finlay 2002 Molecular tools for the study of marine micro- diversity: Shotgun Sequencing DNA Microarrays Quantitative PCR Sequencing 1 DNA PCR RFLP, DGGE FISH Environmental Clone Librairies Taq Polymerase Thermophilus aquaticus. More than 2 million copies in 20 cycles The Sanger sequencing reaction: Automatic DNA sequencing using fluorescent dyes: Electropherogram Denaturing Gradient Gel Electrophoresis -fragment: around 500 bp -GC clamp: 39-50 bp Denaturant: Urea, Formamide, High temperature (TGGE) Formation of heteroduplex!! Typical DGGE gel: Horseradish Peroxydase Basic steps in FISH: 1) Collection of natural samples through filtration 2) Cells are dehydrated with EtOH 3) Cells are stored at –80 degreeC. 4) Probe hybridization 5) Washing of unhybridyzed probe Not necessary for monolabelled probes 6) Addition of Fluorescein-Tyramide 7) Unfixed Fluorescein-Tyramide is washed 8) DNA staining with DAPI or propidium iodide PRINCIPLE OF FLOW CYTOMETRIC ANALYSIS Flow cytometers count and analyse individual particles in a fluid. Fast and one by one. The analysis consist of forward and sideward scattered light as well as fluorescence of the cells. The cells are funneled by a sheath fluid in single file through a laser beam focus at typically 1,000 or more per second. The detected optical signals from each passing particle are digitized and listed into correlated data. If a sorter unit is present, individual particles may be sorted physically depending on their optical signals. Each dot represents a single measured particle. Courtesy Glen Tarran, PML Chlorophyll fluorescence Data are displayed as dual-parameter plots of combinations of light scatter and fluorescence depending on the particles being analysed. Forward light scatter is governed by particle size and sideward scatter is mostly sensitive for small cellular structures. The fluorescence, probed in several emission bands relates to the amount of natural cellular pigment and its composition, and/or artificially introduced pigment. Applications range from simple phytoplankton counting and sizing to more elaborate physiological analysis, and species recognition using artificial neural net algorithms. Side scatter - PICO-EUKARYOTES 1. Moon Van der Stay et al. 2001 One water samples in the Pacific; - 75m 35 SSU rDNA sequences 2. Lopez-Garcia et al. 2001 One site at the Antarctic Polar Front 4 depths: 250 / 500 / 2000 / 3000m 24 complete SSU rDNA sequences Results:11 already known pico-eukaryotes 24 totally new phylotypes, with two new groups of alveolate. 2 novel groups of Alveolates that account for 65 to 76% of the sequences retrieved A few new Heterokonts ALVEOLATES Sub-surface Deep Sea Globorotalia truncatulinoides L R Single Cell PCR amplification (ITS rDNA) of 40 Globorotalia truncatulinoides collected along an Indian Ocean transect. Success rate = 90% After PCR After RFLP (Sau 96 I) Type I Type IV DNA extraction : 4 cents PCR amplification : 30 cents RPLF : 20 cents Type III $ 0.5/reaction !! 17 bi-monthly samplings from 100m2 area of beech forest soil in Austria. On a total of … 1000 soil ciliates! Foissner’s estimation: at least 30 000 species of free-living ciliates, and eventually an order of magnitude higher!! (Corliss, 2001: 213 000 species of protists) Foissner 2002