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The Taxon Hypothesis Paradigm - On the Unambiguous Detection and Communication of Taxa
- Source :
- Koljalg, U, Nilsson, H R, Schigel, D, Tedersoo, L, Larsson, K-H, May, T W, Taylor, A F S, Jeppesen, T S, Frøslev, T G, Lindahl, B D, Pöldmaa, K, Saar, I, Suija, A, Savchenko, A, Yatsiuk, I, Adojaan, K, Ivanov, F, Piirmann, T, Pöhönen, R, Zirk, A & Abarenkov, K 2020, ' The Taxon Hypothesis Paradigm-On the Unambiguous Detection and Communication of Taxa ', Microorganisms, vol. 8, no. 12, 1910 . https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms8121910, Microorganisms, Vol 8, Iss 1910, p 1910 (2020), Microorganisms, Volume 8, Issue 12
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Here, we describe the taxon hypothesis (TH) paradigm, which covers the construction, identification, and communication of taxa as datasets. Defining taxa as datasets of individuals and their traits will make taxon identification and most importantly communication of taxa precise and reproducible. This will allow datasets with standardized and atomized traits to be used digitally in identification pipelines and communicated through persistent identifiers. Such datasets are particularly useful in the context of formally undescribed or even physically undiscovered species if data such as sequences from samples of environmental DNA (eDNA) are available. Implementing the TH paradigm will to some extent remove the impediment to hastily discover and formally describe all extant species in that the TH paradigm allows discovery and communication of new species and other taxa also in the absence of formal descriptions. The TH datasets can be connected to a taxonomic backbone providing access to the vast information associated with the tree of life. In parallel to the description of the TH paradigm, we demonstrate how it is implemented in the UNITE digital taxon communication system. UNITE TH datasets include rich data on individuals and their rDNA ITS sequences. These datasets are equipped with digital object identifiers (DOI) that serve to fix their identity in our communication. All datasets are also connected to a GBIF taxonomic backbone. Researchers processing their eDNA samples using UNITE datasets will, thus, be able to publish their findings as taxon occurrences in the GBIF data portal. UNITE species hypothesis (species level THs) datasets are increasingly utilized in taxon identification pipelines and even formally undescribed species can be identified and communicated by using UNITE. The TH paradigm seeks to achieve unambiguous, unique, and traceable communication of taxa and their properties at any level of the tree of life. It offers a rapid way to discover and communicate undescribed species in identification pipelines and data portals before they are lost to the sixth mass extinction.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine
Microbiology (medical)
Biologisk systematik
Computer science
Tree of life
Context (language use)
Biological Systematics
Biodiversity informatics
BARCODE
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
Microbiology
Article
03 medical and health sciences
taxonomy
Virology
Taxonomy (general)
SEARCH
Environmental DNA
taxon hypotheses
lcsh:QH301-705.5
microbial species
DNA taxonomy
Information retrieval
IDENTIFICATION
species hypotheses
discovery of species
Identifier
030104 developmental biology
Taxon
lcsh:Biology (General)
metabarcoding
Identification (biology)
biodiversity informatics
SYSTEM
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Koljalg, U, Nilsson, H R, Schigel, D, Tedersoo, L, Larsson, K-H, May, T W, Taylor, A F S, Jeppesen, T S, Frøslev, T G, Lindahl, B D, Pöldmaa, K, Saar, I, Suija, A, Savchenko, A, Yatsiuk, I, Adojaan, K, Ivanov, F, Piirmann, T, Pöhönen, R, Zirk, A & Abarenkov, K 2020, ' The Taxon Hypothesis Paradigm-On the Unambiguous Detection and Communication of Taxa ', Microorganisms, vol. 8, no. 12, 1910 . https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms8121910, Microorganisms, Vol 8, Iss 1910, p 1910 (2020), Microorganisms, Volume 8, Issue 12
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....8881cf5be12951de5f3d53694f076dd8
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms8121910