“…On the other hand, driven by declining costs, RNA-seq is becoming increasingly accessible to labs with modest resources; and as a result, it is being employed on an everexpanding catalog of non-model organisms, pervading the fields of agriculture, aquaculture, ecology, and environment. A very short list of recent studies include: environmental stress response in sea-trout [3], coral [4], ryegrass [5], pigeonpea [6], tiger barb [7]; immune response to parasites and pathogens in guppy [8], eel [9], silkworm [10], peanut [11], sunflower [12]; mechanisms of phenotypic divergence in hares [13], bats [14], grass carps [15]; effect of diet in the growth and development in shrimp [16], yellow perch [17], mandarin fish [18], grenadier anchovy [19], catfish [20], tilapia [21], bass [22]. It is only likely that RNA-seq will continue to rapidly proliferate while high-quality reference databases grow at a slow pace.…”