Connect.BarcodeofLife.net

international online community for dna barcoding professionals

Date: Jul 30, 2009


Pub: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 106(3) 12794-12797(4 Aug 2009). Online Early


Author(s): Hollingsworth, P. M., Forrest, L.L., Spouge, J.L., Hajibabaei, M., Ratnasingham, S., van der Bank, M., Chase, M. W., Cowan, R.S., Erickson, D. L., Fazekas, A. J., Graham, S.W., James, K.E., Kim, K.-J., Kress, W. J., Schneider, H., van AlphenStahl, J.


Link to Publication

Abstract:

DNA barcoding involves sequencing a standard region of DNA as a tool for species identification. However, there has been no agreement on which region(s) should be used for barcoding land plants. To provide a community recommendation on a standard plant barcode, we have compared the performance of 7 leading candidate plastid DNA regions (atpF–atpH spacer, matK gene, rbcL gene, rpoB gene, rpoC1 gene, psbK–psbI spacer, and trnH–psbA spacer). Based on assessments of recoverability, sequence quality, and levels of species discrimination, we recommend the 2-locus combination of rbcL+matK as the plant barcode. This core 2-locus barcode will provide a universal framework for the routine use of DNA sequence data to identify specimens and contribute toward the discovery of overlooked species of land plants.

Tags: barcoding, hollingsworth, land, plants

Views: 2

Reply to This

Translate

Tory's site-wide code

New to the Connect network?


Watch our Intro Webinar


Introduce yourself to the Connect community


Write a blog post


Ask a question

Tory's code

© 2012   Created by Matthew Fisher.   Powered by .

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service