Advancing taxonomy and bioinventories with DNA barcodes

Author:

Miller Scott E.1ORCID,Hausmann Axel2ORCID,Hallwachs Winnie3ORCID,Janzen Daniel H.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, PO Box 37012, Washington, DC 20013-7012, USA

2. SNSB—Zoologische Staatssammlung München, Münchhausenstraße 21, 81247, München, Germany

3. Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA

Abstract

We use three examples—field and ecology-based inventories in Costa Rica and Papua New Guinea and a museum and taxonomic-based inventory of the moth family Geometridae—to demonstrate the use of DNA barcoding (a short sequence of the mitochondrial COI gene) in biodiversity inventories, from facilitating workflows of identification of freshly collected specimens from the field, to describing the overall diversity of megadiverse taxa from museum collections, and most importantly linking the fresh specimens, the general museum collections and historic type specimens. The process also flushes out unexpected sibling species hiding under long-applied scientific names, thereby clarifying and parsing previously mixed collateral data. The Barcode of Life Database has matured to an essential interactive platform for the multi-authored and multi-process collaboration. The BIN system of creating and tracking DNA sequence-based clusters as proxies for species has become a powerful way around some parts of the ‘taxonomic impediment’, especially in entomology, by providing fast but testable and tractable species hypotheses, tools for visualizing the distribution of those in time and space and an interim naming system for communication. This article is part of the themed issue ‘From DNA barcodes to biomes’.

Funder

US National Science Foundation

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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4. Joining Inventory by Parataxonomists with DNA Barcoding of a Large Complex Tropical Conserved Wildland in Northwestern Costa Rica

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