
pmid: 16214751
pmc: PMC1609233
AbstractThe scale of diversity of life on this planet is a significant challenge for any scientific programme hoping to produce a complete catalogue, whatever means is used. For DNA barcoding studies, this difficulty is compounded by the realization that any chosen barcode sequence is not the gene ‘for’ speciation and that taxa have evolutionary histories. How are we to disentangle the confounding effects of reticulate population genetic processes? Using the DNA barcode data from meiofaunal surveys, here we discuss the benefits of treating the taxa defined by barcodes without reference to their correspondence to ‘species’, and suggest that using this non-idealist approach facilitates access to taxon groups that are not accessible to other methods of enumeration and classification. Major issues remain, in particular the methodologies for taxon discrimination in DNA barcode data.
Electronic Data Processing, Base Sequence, Automatic Data Processing, Molecular Sequence Data, Biodiversity, Bryophyta, DNA, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Invertebrates, Electron Transport Complex IV, Genetics, Population, Molecular Diagnostic Techniques, Species Specificity, Animals, Cluster Analysis, Phylogeny, DNA Primers
Electronic Data Processing, Base Sequence, Automatic Data Processing, Molecular Sequence Data, Biodiversity, Bryophyta, DNA, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Invertebrates, Electron Transport Complex IV, Genetics, Population, Molecular Diagnostic Techniques, Species Specificity, Animals, Cluster Analysis, Phylogeny, DNA Primers
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