1. DNA barcodes on their own are not enough to describe a species.
- Author
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Zamani, Alireza, Fric, Zdenek Faltýnek, Gante, Hugo F., Hopkins, Tapani, Orfinger, Alexander B., Scherz, Mark D., Bartoňová, Alena Sucháčková, and Pos, Davide Dal
- Subjects
BAR codes ,SPECIES ,BIOLOGICAL classification ,DNA fingerprinting ,DNA ,NUMBERS of species - Abstract
Earth's biodiversity is still so poorly known that only about two million (Bánki et al., 2021) of the estimated nine million or more eukaryotic species (Larsen et al., 2017; Mora et al., 2011) have been described. Meierotto et al. (2019), when first proposing the minimalist approach, failed to merge their new DNA barcode-based species with existing species for which barcodes are not available. COI BARCODES ARE NOT SUITABLE ON THEIR OWN The default assumption of Sharkey, Janzen, et al. (2021) is that COI barcode clusters (Barcode Index Numbers [or BINs] computed by BOLD systems) equate to species. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
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