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Article Dans Une Revue Molecular Ecology Année : 2016

Coalescing molecular evolution and DNA barcoding

Lucie Zinger

Résumé

The DNA barcoding concept has considerably boosted taxonomy research by facilitating the identification of specimens and discovery of new species. Used alone or in combination with DNA metabarcoding on environmental samples , the approach is becoming a standard for basic and applied research in ecology, evolution and conservation across taxa, communities and ecosystems . However, DNA barcoding suffers from several shortcomings that still remain overlooked, especially when it comes to species delineation . In this issue of Molecular Ecology, Barley & Thomson (2016) demonstrate that the choice of models of sequence evolution has substantial impacts on inferred genetic distances, with a propensity of the widely used Kimura 2‐parameter model to lead to underestimated species richness. While DNA barcoding has been and will continue to be a powerful tool for specimen identification and preliminary taxonomic sorting, this work calls for a systematic assessment of substitution models fit on barcoding data used for species delineation and reopens the debate on the limitation of this approach.

Dates et versions

hal-02962354 , version 1 (09-10-2020)

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Lucie Zinger, Herve Philippe. Coalescing molecular evolution and DNA barcoding. Molecular Ecology, 2016, 25 (9), pp.1908-1910. ⟨10.1111/mec.13639⟩. ⟨hal-02962354⟩
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