Journal
JOURNAL OF HEREDITY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jhered/esad070
Keywords
aquatic insect; Calopterygidae; comparative genomics; long-read sequencing; Odonata; Omni-C; PacBio; riparian; Zygoptera
Categories
Ask authors/readers for more resources
This study reports the genome sequencing and assembly of the smoky rubyspot damselfly (Hetaerina titia Drury, 1773), a species that has become a model system for studying sexual selection and interspecific behavioral interference due to its highly variable wing pigmentation. By comparing its assembly to that of other damselflies, Hetaerina emerges as a genome-enabled genus for further studies on the ecological and evolutionary forces shaping biological diversity.
Smoky rubyspot damselflies (Hetaerina titia Drury, 1773) are one of the most commonly encountered odonates along streams and rivers on both slopes of Central America and the Atlantic drainages in the United States and southern Canada. Owing to their highly variable wing pigmentation, they have become a model system for studying sexual selection and interspecific behavioral interference. Here, we sequence and assemble the genome of a female smoky rubyspot. Of the primary assembly (i.e. the principle pseudohaplotype), 98.8% is made up of 12 chromosomal pseudomolecules (2N = 22A + X). There are 75 scaffolds in total, an N50 of 120 Mb, a contig-N50 of 0.64 Mb, and a high arthropod BUSCO score [C: 97.6% (S: 97.3%, D: 0.3%), F: 0.8%, M: 1.6%]. We then compare our assembly to that of the blue-tailed damselfly genome (Ischnura elegans), the most complete damselfly assembly to date, and a recently published assembly for an American rubyspot damselfly (Hetaerina americana). Collectively, these resources make Hetaerina a genome-enabled genus for further studies of the ecological and evolutionary forces shaping biological diversity.
Authors
I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.
Reviews
Recommended
No Data Available