Loading [Contrib]/a11y/accessibility-menu.js
Skip to main content
biogenomes
  • Menu
  • Articles
    • Genome Sequencing
    • All
  • For Authors
  • Editorial Board
  • About
  • Open Access
  • Peer Review
  • search

RSS Feed

Enter the URL below into your favorite RSS reader.

http://localhost:54963/feed
Genome Sequencing
January 21, 2023 EDT

The Complete Genome Sequence of Sarcoramphus papa (Cathartidae), the King Vulture

Therese A Catanach, Stacy Pirro,
genomebirdvulture
Copyright Logoccby-sa-4.0 • https://doi.org/10.56179/001c.68132
biogenomes
Catanach, Therese A, and Stacy Pirro. 2023. “The Complete Genome Sequence of Sarcoramphus Papa (Cathartidae), the King Vulture.” Biodiversity Genomes, January, 6–7. https:/​/​doi.org/​10.56179/​001c.68132.
Save article as...▾

View more stats

Abstract

Sarcoramphus papa is a New World Vulture found predominantly in tropical lowland forests stretching from southern Mexico to northern Argentina. We present the whole genome sequence of this species. Illumina paired-end reads were assembled by a de novo method followed by a finishing step. The raw and assembled data are publicly available via GenBank: Sequence Read Archive (SRR19167646) and assembled genome (GCA_027580115).

Introduction

The New World Vulture Sarcoramphus papa is one of the largest birds in the Neotropics. Adults are predominantly white with black flight and tail feathers. The head and neck are bald, and the skin is extremely colorful and can include yellow, orange, blue, purple, and red markings that contrast sharply with the white eyes. Adults also have a very noticeable orange fleshy caruncle above the cere. Juveniles are sooty black and take several years to develop adult plumage and caruncles.

Methods

A single museum specimen from Museum of Southwestern Biology (MSB:Bird:27868) was used for this study. DNA extraction was performed using the Qiagen DNAeasy genomic extraction kit using the standard process. A paired-end sequencing library was constructed using the Illumina TruSeq kit, according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The library was sequenced on an Illumina Hi-Seq platform in paired-end, 2 × 150bp format. The resulting fastq files were trimmed of adapter/primer sequence and low-quality regions with Trimmomatic v0.33 (Bolger, Lohse, and Usadel 2014). The trimmed sequence was assembled by SPAdes v2.5 (Bankevich et al. 2012) followed by a finishing step using Zanfona v1.0 (Kieras 2021) to make additional contig joins based on conserved regions in related species.

Results

The genome assembly yielded a total sequence length of 1,227,506,220 bp over 14,173 scaffolds.


Data availability

Raw and assembled data is publicly available via GenBank:

Raw genome data

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/?term=SRR19167646

Assembled genome

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/assembly/GCA_027580115

Funding

Funding was provided by Iridian Genomes, grant# IRGEN_RG_2021-1345 Genomic Studies of Eukaryotic Taxa to SP and NSF grant DEB 2203228 to TAC.

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare they have no conflicts of interests.

Submitted: January 17, 2023 EDT

Accepted: January 21, 2023 EDT

References

Bankevich, Anton, Sergey Nurk, Dmitry Antipov, Alexey A. Gurevich, Mikhail Dvorkin, Alexander S. Kulikov, Valery M. Lesin, et al. 2012. “SPAdes: A New Genome Assembly Algorithm and Its Applications to Single-Cell Sequencing.” Journal of Computational Biology 19 (5): 455–77. https:/​/​doi.org/​10.1089/​cmb.2012.0021.
Google ScholarPubMed CentralPubMed
Bolger, Anthony M., Marc Lohse, and Bjoern Usadel. 2014. “Trimmomatic: A Flexible Trimmer for Illumina Sequence Data.” Bioinformatics 30 (15): 2114–20. https:/​/​doi.org/​10.1093/​bioinformatics/​btu170.
Google ScholarPubMed CentralPubMed
Kieras, M. 2021. Zanfona, a genome finishing process for use with paired-end short reads. https:/​/​github.com/​zanfona734/​zanfona.
Google Scholar

This website uses cookies

We use cookies to enhance your experience and support COUNTER Metrics for transparent reporting of readership statistics. Cookie data is not sold to third parties or used for marketing purposes.

Powered by Scholastica, the modern academic journal management system