Skip to main content
Home

Information for:

  • Alumni
  • Applicants
  • Current Students
  • Staff
  • Parents
  • Job Vacancies
  • Covid-19
  • Cymraeg
My country:

Main Menu

    • Study Options
      • Study Home
      • Why Study at Bangor?
      • Undergraduate Study
      • Postgraduate Taught Study
      • Postgraduate Research
      • Part-time Courses
      • January Start Courses
      • Degree Apprenticeships
      • Study Abroad
      • Work Experience
    • Study Advice
      • Apply
      • Already Applied?
      • Fees and Finances
      • Scholarships and Bursaries
      • Get Ready for University
    • Explore Bangor
      • Open Days and Visits
      • Virtual Student Experience

    Find a Course

    Order a Prospectus

    • Student Life
      • Student Life Home
      • Bangor and the Area
      • Social Life and Entertainment
      • Accommodation
      • Clubs and Societies
      • Sport
      • Virtual Student Experience
    • Your Experience at Bangor
      • Student Support
      • Skills and Employability
      • Study or Work Abroad
      • Fees and Finances

    Student Profiles

    Student Videos and Vlogs

    • Choose Bangor
      • International Home
      • Why Bangor?
      • Location
      • Accommodation
      • Student Support
      • Contact Us
    • Apply
      • Entry Requirements
      • Tuition Fees and Scholarships
      • How to Apply
      • Already Applied
      • Study Abroad
      • Exchanges

    Country Specific Information

    Join us on a Virtual Open Day

    Bangor University International College

    Covid-19 Information

    • Research
      • Research Home
      • About Our Research
      • Research in our Academic Schools
      • Research Institutes and Centres
      • Research Portal
      • Research, Innovation and Impact Office (RIIO)
      • Energy
      • Research News
    • Postgraduate Research Opportunities
      • Postgraduate Research
      • Doctoral School
    • Events and Training Opportunities
      • Researcher Development
    • The University
      • About Us
      • Our Mission
      • Strategy 2030
      • Annual Review
      • Our Location
      • Academic Schools and Colleges
      • Services and Facilities
      • Vice Chancellor’s Office
      • Working with Business
      • Working with the Community
      • Sustainability
      • Health and Wellbeing
      • Contact Us
    • Working for Us
      • Job Vacancies
    • University Management and Governance
      • Policies and Procedures
      • Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement
      • Management and Governance
    • University and the Community
      • Pontio
      • Sports Facilities
      • Conference Facilities
      • Places to Eat and Drink
      • Public Events
      • Widening Access
      • Services to Schools
    • Business Services
      • Business Services Home
    • Collaboration Hub
      • Collaboration Hub
      • Funding for Collaborative Research and Development (R&D) & Innovation
      • Business Facilities and Networks
      • Consultancy, Specialist Expertise and Knowledge
      • Commercialisation and Intellectual Property (IP)
      • Student Placements and Internships in Business & Enterprise
      • Training and Continuing Professional Development
      • Degree Apprenticeships
    • Conferencing and Business Dining
      • Conferencing Facilities
      • Business Dining
    • Contacts
      • Research, Innovation and Impact Office (RIIO)
      • Get In Touch
    • News
      • Current News
      • Research News
      • Student News
    • Events
      • Events

    • Study Options
      • Study Home
      • Why Study at Bangor?
      • Undergraduate Study
      • Postgraduate Taught Study
      • Postgraduate Research
      • Part-time Courses
      • January Start Courses
      • Degree Apprenticeships
      • Study Abroad
      • Work Experience
    • Study Advice
      • Apply
      • Already Applied?
      • Fees and Finances
      • Scholarships and Bursaries
      • Get Ready for University
    • Explore Bangor
      • Virtual Open Days and Visits
      • Virtual Student Experience

    Find a Course

    Order a Prospectus

    • Student Life
      • Student Life Home
      • Bangor and the Area
      • Social Life and Entertainment
      • Accommodation
      • Clubs and Societies
      • Sport
      • Virtual Student Experience
    • Your Experience at Bangor
      • Student Support
      • Skills and Employability
      • Study or Work Abroad
      • Fees and Finances

    Student Profiles

    Student Videos and Vlogs

    • Choose Bangor
      • International Home
      • Why Bangor?
      • Location
      • Student Support
      • Contact Us
    • Apply
      • Entry Requirements
      • Tuition Fees and Scholarships
      • How to Apply
      • Already Applied
      • Study Abroad
      • Exchanges

    Country Specific Information

    Join us on a Virtual Open Day

    Bangor University International College

    Covid-19 Information

    • Research
      • Research Home
      • About Our Research
      • Research in our Academic Schools
      • Research Institutes and Centres
      • Research Portal
      • Research, Innovation and Impact Office (RIIO)
      • Energy
      • Research News
    • Postgraduate Research Opportunities
      • Postgraduate Research
      • Doctoral School
    • Events and Training Opportunities
      • Researcher Development
    • The University
      • About Us
      • Our Mission
      • Strategy 2030
      • Annual Review
      • Our Location
      • Academic Schools and Colleges
      • Services and Facilities
      • Vice Chancellor’s Office
      • Working with Business
      • Working with the Community
      • Sustainability
      • Health and Wellbeing
      • Contact Us
    • Working for Us
      • Job Vacancies
    • University Management and Governance
      • Policies and Procedures
      • Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement
      • Management and Governance
    • University and the Community
      • Pontio
      • Sports Facilities
      • Conference Facilities
      • Places to Eat and Drink
      • Public Events
      • Widening Access
      • Services to Schools
    • Business Services
      • Business Services Home
    • Collaboration Hub
      • Collaboration Hub
      • Funding for Collaborative Research and Development (R&D) & Innovation
      • Business Facilities and Networks
      • Consultancy, Specialist Expertise and Knowledge
      • Commercialisation and Intellectual Property (IP)
      • Student Placements and Internships in Business & Enterprise
      • Training and Continuing Professional Development
      • Degree Apprenticeships
    • Conferencing and Business Dining
      • Conferencing Facilities
      • Business Dining
    • Contacts
      • Research, Innovation and Impact Office (RIIO)
      • Get In Touch
    • News
      • Current News
      • Research News
      • Student News
    • Events
      • Events

Information for:

  • Alumni
  • Applicants
  • Current Students
  • Staff
  • Parents
  • Job Vacancies
  • Covid-19
My country:

Search

Close

Breadcrumb

  • Cymraeg

Share this page:
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

New DNA Sequencing reveals hidden communities

Half a bucket full of sand from an unassuming beach in Scotland has revealed a far richer and more complex web of microscopic animals living within the tiny ‘ecosystem’ than have previously been identified. 

 

A paper published in the new online journal Nature Communications (http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1095) shows how this was achieved using a new method that allows DNA sequencing of large communities of very small multi-celled creatures and animals. The new technique, being dubbed environmental metagenetics, has the potential to transform current methods of species identification and environmental analysis, providing new insights into the structure and composition of those communities as well as new potential applications.

The work was conducted by an international team, led by Dr Simon Creer at Bangor University’s School of Biological Sciences, and funded by the Natural Environment Research Council. The project was part of the PhD thesis work of Vera Fonseca, at  Bangor University’s School of Biological Sciences, funded by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology.

The team were able to identify the genetic diversity of almost all the animal species ranging between 45 microns- 1mm in size throughout the Scottish beach site. They were able to quantify numbers of different groups of animals for the first time. Developed to be used to assess communities within seabed sediments, the technique could be adopted for any ecosystem inhabited by microscopic organisms.

“The sequencing techniques are orders of magnitude faster and cheaper than traditional approaches. To complete the same work using traditional methods would take unquantifiable centuries of working hours to manually identify each individual species from a sample,” said Vera Fonseca, lead author and PhD student at Bangor University.

The new method paves the way for future research into topics as diverse as climate change, the effect of pollution on ecosystem health and the distribution of microbial life from the deep sea to the polar environments.

“Adding the DNA sequence of the samples to a database will ultimately enable scientists to track where individual species occur- and over time- to gauge their reaction to climate change or to pollution or other human induced events,” explains Dr Creer of Bangor University.

Professor Kelley Thomas, a collaborator from the University of New Hampshire is already using identical approaches to assess the impact of the recent oil spill on the microbial metazoan communities of the Gulf of Mexico.

“By being able to look objectively at all animal groups simultaneously, for the very first time, we have been able to identify substantial genetic diversity and quantify the relative abundance of different forms of animal life,” says Dr Creer of Bangor University’s School of Biological Sciences.

“For example, the data revealed that a group of predatory flatworms has been overlooked in traditional assessments. This is akin to a savannah grassland ecologist realising that the whole cat family had previously been missed in ecological studies of the savannah grassland.”

 

One of the paper’s authors, Prof. P John D Lambshead of the University of Southampton’s School of Ocean & Earth Science commented:

"In the early eighties, I spent three years studying ten thousand microscopic worms from the Firth of Clyde by eye, one at a time, using high power light microscopes, and identified 113 species. Our new DNA study identified 182 types of nematode worms from the same region in just one month.”

Publication date: 19 October 2010

Home

About Us

Academic Schools and Colleges

  • School of Natural Sciences
    • Home
    • About the School
      • Our Location
      • Bangor and the Area
      • Commercial Facilities
      • Our Staff
      • Teaching
      • Athena Swan
    • Our Staff
    • Key Subjects
      • Biology
      • Conservation
      • Food Security
      • Environment
      • Forestry
      • Geography
      • Zoology
    • Undergraduate Study
      • Order a prospectus
      • University Open Days
      • Offer Holder Days
      • Why Study at Bangor?
      • Accommodation
      • Get ready for University
      • Student Life
      • Scholarships & Bursaries
      • Fees & Finances
      • Study or Work Abroad
      • Our Videos
      • What our Students say
    • Postgraduate Study
      • Why study with us?
      • Register your interest in postgraduate study
      • Fees & Finances
      • Scholarships & Funding
      • Entry requirements
      • Applying to Bangor
      • Accommodation
      • Student Support
      • Student Life
      • Studying at Bangor
      • Student Profiles
    • Order a Prospectus
    • Open Days
    • Distance Learning
      • About us
      • Our Courses
      • Teaching and Learning
      • What our students say...
      • Our Videos
      • Careers and Employability
      • How to Apply
      • Course Structure
      • Publications and News
      • Fees
      • Entry Requirements
      • Contact details
    • Professional Accreditation
    • Our Research
      • Biology and Zoology
        • Molecular Ecology and Evolution
        • Biogeochemistry and Plant Science
        • Animal Physiology, Behaviour and Conservation
        • Microbiology, Parasitology and Biotechnology
        • Research degrees
      • Environment and Natural Resources
        • Research Students
        • Opportunities
        • Project websites
        • Facilities
        • Partners and Collaborators
    • Outreach activities
      • Chemistry
        • Salters Events
        • Welsh and English Interactive Periodic Table
    • News
    • Opportunities
    • Contact us
Home

Follow Us

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • LinkedIn

Bangor University

Bangor, Gwynedd, LL57 2DG, UK

+44 (0)1248 351151

Contact Us

Visit Us

Maps & Directions

Policy

  • Legal Compliance
  • Modern Slavery Act 2015 Statement
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Privacy and Cookies
  • Welsh Language Policy
Map

Bangor University is a Registered Charity: No. 1141565

© 2020 Bangor University