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      Reliable, verifiable and efficient monitoring of biodiversity via metabarcoding.

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          Abstract

          To manage and conserve biodiversity, one must know what is being lost, where, and why, as well as which remedies are likely to be most effective. Metabarcoding technology can characterise the species compositions of mass samples of eukaryotes or of environmental DNA. Here, we validate metabarcoding by testing it against three high-quality standard data sets that were collected in Malaysia (tropical), China (subtropical) and the United Kingdom (temperate) and that comprised 55,813 arthropod and bird specimens identified to species level with the expenditure of 2,505 person-hours of taxonomic expertise. The metabarcode and standard data sets exhibit statistically correlated alpha- and beta-diversities, and the two data sets produce similar policy conclusions for two conservation applications: restoration ecology and systematic conservation planning. Compared with standard biodiversity data sets, metabarcoded samples are taxonomically more comprehensive, many times quicker to produce, less reliant on taxonomic expertise and auditable by third parties, which is essential for dispute resolution.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Ecol Lett
          Ecology letters
          Wiley
          1461-0248
          1461-023X
          Oct 2013
          : 16
          : 10
          Affiliations
          [1 ] State Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, Yunnan, 650223, China.
          Article
          10.1111/ele.12162
          23910579
          3fefbfbb-2b36-4f8a-aa52-5ec5ff23e65f
          © 2013 The Authors. Ecology Letters published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd and CNRS.
          History

          Biodiversity,DNA barcoding,climate change,heathland,restoration ecology,surveillance monitoring,systematic conservation planning,targeted monitoring,tropical forest

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