ABSTRACT
Biodiversity assessment is the key to understanding the  relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, but there  is a well-acknowledged biodiversity identification gap related to  eukaryotic meiofaunal organisms. Meiofaunal identification is confounded  by the small size of taxa, morphological convergence and intraspecific  variation. However, the most important restricting factor in meiofaunal  ecological research is the mismatch between diversity and the number of  taxonomists that are able to simultaneously identify and catalogue  meiofaunal diversity. Accordingly, a molecular operational taxonomic  unit (MOTU)-based approach has been advocated for en  mass meiofaunal biodiversity assessment, but it has been  restricted by the lack of throughput afforded by chain termination  sequencing. Contemporary pyrosequencing offers a solution to this  problem in the form of environmental metagenetic analyses, but this  represents a novel field of biodiversity assessment. Here, we provide an  overview of meiofaunal metagenetic analyses, ranging from sample  preservation and DNA extraction to PCR, sequencing and the bioinformatic  interrogation of multiple, independent samples using 454 Roche  sequencing platforms. We report two examples of environmental  metagenetic nuclear small subunit 18S (nSSU) analyses of marine and  tropical rainforest habitats and provide critical appraisals of the  level of putative recombinant DNA molecules (chimeras) in metagenetic  data sets. Following stringent quality control measures, environmental  metagenetic analyses achieve MOTU formation across the eukaryote domain  of life at a fraction of the time and cost of traditional approaches.  The effectiveness of Roche 454 sequencing brings substantial advantages  to studies aiming to elucidate the molecular genetic richness of not  only meiofaunal, but also all complex eukaryotic communities.
Molecular Ecology
Volume  19 Issue s1, Pages 4 - 20
Special  Issue: Next Generation Molecular Ecology
Published Online:  10 Feb 2010
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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