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      Advancing taxonomy and bioinventories with DNA barcodes

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          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’.

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          Most cited references20

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          From barcodes to genomes: extending the concept of DNA barcoding.

          DNA barcoding has had a major impact on biodiversity science. The elegant simplicity of establishing massive scale databases for a few barcode loci is continuing to change our understanding of species diversity patterns, and continues to enhance human abilities to distinguish among species. Capitalizing on the developments of next generation sequencing technologies and decreasing costs of genome sequencing, there is now the opportunity for the DNA barcoding concept to be extended to new kinds of genomic data. We illustrate the benefits and capacity to do this, and also note the constraints and barriers to overcome before it is truly scalable. We advocate a twin track approach: (i) continuation and acceleration of global efforts to build the DNA barcode reference library of life on earth using standard DNA barcodes and (ii) active development and application of extended DNA barcodes using genome skimming to augment the standard barcoding approach.
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            Integration of DNA barcoding into an ongoing inventory of complex tropical biodiversity.

            Inventory of the caterpillars, their food plants and parasitoids began in 1978 for today's Area de Conservacion Guanacaste (ACG), in northwestern Costa Rica. This complex mosaic of 120 000 ha of conserved and regenerating dry, cloud and rain forest over 0-2000 m elevation contains at least 10 000 species of non-leaf-mining caterpillars used by more than 5000 species of parasitoids. Several hundred thousand specimens of ACG-reared adult Lepidoptera and parasitoids have been intensively and extensively studied morphologically by many taxonomists, including most of the co-authors. DNA barcoding - the use of a standardized short mitochondrial DNA sequence to identify specimens and flush out undisclosed species - was added to the taxonomic identification process in 2003. Barcoding has been found to be extremely accurate during the identification of about 100 000 specimens of about 3500 morphologically defined species of adult moths, butterflies, tachinid flies, and parasitoid wasps. Less than 1% of the species have such similar barcodes that a molecularly based taxonomic identification is impossible. No specimen with a full barcode was misidentified when its barcode was compared with the barcode library. Also as expected from early trials, barcoding a series from all morphologically defined species, and correlating the morphological, ecological and barcode traits, has revealed many hundreds of overlooked presumptive species. Many but not all of these cryptic species can now be distinguished by subtle morphological and/or ecological traits previously ascribed to 'variation' or thought to be insignificant for species-level recognition. Adding DNA barcoding to the inventory has substantially improved the quality and depth of the inventory, and greatly multiplied the number of situations requiring further taxonomic work for resolution. © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd and Crown in the right of Canada.
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              Guild-specific patterns of species richness and host specialization in plant-herbivore food webs from a tropical forest.

              1. The extent to which plant-herbivore feeding interactions are specialized is key to understand the processes maintaining the diversity of both tropical forest plants and their insect herbivores. However, studies documenting the full complexity of tropical plant-herbivore food webs are lacking. 2. We describe a complex, species-rich plant-herbivore food web for lowland rain forest in Papua New Guinea, resolving 6818 feeding links between 224 plant species and 1490 herbivore species drawn from 11 distinct feeding guilds. By standardizing sampling intensity and the phylogenetic diversity of focal plants, we are able to make the first rigorous and unbiased comparisons of specificity patterns across feeding guilds. 3. Specificity was highly variable among guilds, spanning almost the full range of theoretically possible values from extreme trophic generalization to monophagy. 4. We identify guilds of herbivores that are most likely to influence the composition of tropical forest vegetation through density-dependent herbivory or apparent competition. 5. We calculate that 251 herbivore species (48 of them unique) are associated with each rain forest tree species in our study site so that the ∼200 tree species coexisting in the lowland rain forest community are involved in ∼50,000 trophic interactions with ∼9600 herbivore species of insects. This is the first estimate of total herbivore and interaction number in a rain forest plant-herbivore food web. 6. A comprehensive classification of insect herbivores into 24 guilds is proposed, providing a framework for comparative analyses across ecosystems and geographical regions. © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 British Ecological Society.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
                Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond., B, Biol. Sci
                RSTB
                royptb
                Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
                The Royal Society
                0962-8436
                1471-2970
                5 September 2016
                5 September 2016
                : 371
                : 1702 , Theme issue ‘From DNA barcodes to biomes’ compiled and edited by Paul D. N. Hebert, Mehrdad Hajibabaei and Peter M. Hollingsworth
                : 20150339
                Affiliations
                [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
                Author notes

                This paper is dedicated to the memory of our friend Scott Federhen, who catalysed the development of many of the tools at GenBank that facilitate the interoperability of databases that we describe here (e.g. [ 1]).

                One contribution of 16 to a theme issue ‘ From DNA barcodes to biomes’.

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4138-1378
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0358-9928
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5166-809X
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7335-5107
                Article
                rstb20150339
                10.1098/rstb.2015.0339
                4971191
                27481791
                85b88d7e-5f9d-4e0e-84b5-0773764e76ed
                © 2016 The Authors.

                Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 17 May 2016
                Funding
                Funded by: US National Science Foundation;
                Award ID: BSR 9024770 and DEB 9306296, 9400829, 9705072, 0072730, 0515699
                Categories
                1001
                183
                197
                60
                Articles
                Review Article
                Custom metadata
                September 5, 2016

                Philosophy of science
                dna barcoding,cytochrome c oxidase i,biodiversity,interim taxonomy,lepidoptera

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