Abstract

An international consortium of major natural history museums, herbaria and other organizations has launched an ambitious project, the ‘Barcode of Life Initiative’, to promote a process enabling the rapid and inexpensive identification of the estimated 10 million species on Earth. DNA barcoding is a diagnostic technique in which short DNA sequence(s) can be used for species identification. The first international scientific conference on Barcoding of Life was held at the Natural History Museum in London in February 2005, and here we review the scientific challenges discussed during this conference and in previous publications. Although still controversial, the scientific benefits of DNA barcoding include: (i) enabling species identification, including any life stage or fragment, (ii) facilitating species discoveries based on cluster analyses of gene sequences (e.g. cox1 = CO1 , in animals), (iii) promoting development of handheld DNA sequencing technology that can be applied in the field for biodiversity inventories and (iv) providing insight into the diversity of life.

Keywords

DNA barcodingBarcodeHerbariumIdentification (biology)EncyclopediaBiologyBiodiversityEvolutionary biologyDNA sequencingLibrary scienceComputational biologyEcologyDNAComputer scienceGenetics

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Publication Info

Year
2005
Type
review
Volume
360
Issue
1462
Pages
1805-1811
Citations
560
Access
Closed

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Vincent Savolainen, Robyn S. Cowan, Alfried P. Vogler et al. (2005). Towards writing the encyclopaedia of life: an introduction to DNA barcoding. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences , 360 (1462) , 1805-1811. https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2005.1730

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DOI
10.1098/rstb.2005.1730