Given the morphological characters of purple crabs identical with that of the tea-green ones except the body color, it is expected that the purple crabs and the tea-green ones were from the same species. In order to i...Given the morphological characters of purple crabs identical with that of the tea-green ones except the body color, it is expected that the purple crabs and the tea-green ones were from the same species. In order to identify the phylogenetic relationships between them at the molecular level, we amplified and compared two conserved mitochondrial gene fragments of purple and tea-green crabs through PCR-SSCP and DNA sequencing analyses. The results showed that there was no distinct variation of DNA bands of both the CO1 and 16srRNA genes detected in polyacrylamide gels through SSCP analysis between purple and tea-green crab samples, and the following sequence analysis of color-different crab individuals presented 99.81% and 99.91% nucleotide sequence identity of the CO1 and 16srRNA genes respectively. These indicated that there was no species or subspecies differentiation between purple and tea-green crabs, meaning that they belonged to the same species, Portunus trituberculatus.展开更多
文摘Given the morphological characters of purple crabs identical with that of the tea-green ones except the body color, it is expected that the purple crabs and the tea-green ones were from the same species. In order to identify the phylogenetic relationships between them at the molecular level, we amplified and compared two conserved mitochondrial gene fragments of purple and tea-green crabs through PCR-SSCP and DNA sequencing analyses. The results showed that there was no distinct variation of DNA bands of both the CO1 and 16srRNA genes detected in polyacrylamide gels through SSCP analysis between purple and tea-green crab samples, and the following sequence analysis of color-different crab individuals presented 99.81% and 99.91% nucleotide sequence identity of the CO1 and 16srRNA genes respectively. These indicated that there was no species or subspecies differentiation between purple and tea-green crabs, meaning that they belonged to the same species, Portunus trituberculatus.