dc.description.abstract |
In the present research work, 665 plant specimens belonging to 247 species, 62
families of 27 different orders in 5 major classes of plant kingdom i.e. Mangolopsida
(Dicot), Lilipopsida (Mononcot), Pinidae (Gymnosperms), Pteropsida and Bryopsida
were collected from different parts of district Dera Ghazi Khan, Punjab, Pakistan.
Herbarium sheets with mounted and identified specimens of all the species were
deposited in Dr Sultan Ahmad herbarium, GC University, Lahore after posting
voucher numbers. The ethnobotanical knowledge on the use of local plants was
collected from four hundred pertinent people belonging to all walks of life through
their interviews using a semi-structured questionnaire. The plants were found in use
by locals as food, feed, medicine, source of fuel and furniture wood, etc. The leaves of
the plants were found most frequent in use for treating various ailments, as compared
to whole plant or other parts of the plant. Tissue sampling and DNA barcode
sequencing was carried out at NIBGE, Faisalabad and Canadian Centre of DNA
Barcoding (CCDB), University of Guelph, Canada, respectively. At Family level,
61/62 (98.39%) families were found having at least one sequence of rbcl while no
matK sequence in 6/27 (22.22%) orders and 13/62 (19.67%) families. But
49/61(80.33%) families were found to have both rbcl and matK sequences. A total of
1015 barcodes were sequenced, with 630/665 (94.73%) barcodes having rbcl
sequences of 235/247 (95.14%) species representing 176 genera and 62 families while
385/665 (57.90%) matK sequences of 185/247 (74.90%) species from 146 genera and
49 families. The data analysis was accomplished on the basis of three criteria; PCR
Amplification and Sequencing Success of rbcl and matK; Barcode Gap Analysis
(Nearest Neighbor (NN) Analysis) and Neighbor Joining (N/J) Cluster Analysis. PCR
and sequencing success were found very high for the rbcl region, i.e. 94.73% (630 /
665 specimens) while matK had the lowest overall rate of recovery, i.e. 57.9% (385 /
665 specimens). The matK showed the highest sequence quality for almost all the
recovered samples. Barcode Gap Analysis revealed that 95.22% sequences of matK
and 96.63 % of rbcl exhibited no intra-specific variation. The inter-specific
divergence varied from 0.0% to 19.06% for rbcl while 0.0% to 4.12% for matK. Out
of 105 congeneric species with rbcl sequences, 69/105 (65.71%) were identified while
in congeneric species with matK sequences 54/71 species (73.24%) were successfully
differentiated. In pair wise divergence across all the species (non-congeneric), both
xiv
matK and rbcl sequences showed clear boundaries between the 84.21% (96/114) and
70.45% (93/133) of the species, respectively. In Barcode Gap Analysis, matK showed
more discriminatory power than rbcl. Among taxa, patterns of sequence divergence
was visualized by means of Neighbor-Joining (NJ) cluster on MEGA6. In all three
trees of rbcl, matK and rbcl+matK, assignment of families within their respective
orders was 83.61% (51/61), 79.59% (39/49) and 83.67% (41/49), respectively. In all
three trees of rbcl, matK and rbcl+matK, species were identified on the basis of
“Bootstrap Threshold Value” and “Monophyly”. In neighbor trees (N/J) of rbcl, matK
and rbcl + matK, the number of monophyletic families were 49/61(80.33%), 40/49
(81.63%) and 40/47 (85.11%), respectively. In neighbor joining (N/J) trees of rbcl,
matK and rbcl + matK, the number of monophyletic families were 49/61(80.33%),
40/49 (81.63%) and 40/47 (85.11%), respectively. Therefore, on the basis of
monophyletic recovery and node support, all three neighbor joining trees were found
best resolved monophyletic trees having more than 80% monophyletic families. |
en_US |