2010
DOI: 10.3109/19401736.2010.532212
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After 7 years and 1000 citations: Comparative assessment of the DNA barcoding and the DNA taxonomy proposals for taxonomists and non-taxonomists

Abstract: In 2003, two different approaches-DNA taxonomy and DNA barcoding-were simultaneously proposed to overcome some of the perceived intrinsic weaknesses of the traditional morphology-based taxonomical system, and to help non-taxonomists to resolve their crucial need for accurate and rapid species identification tools. After 7 years, it seems unlikely that a completely new taxonomical system based on molecular characters only (DNA taxonomy) will develop in the future. It is more likely that both morphological and m… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(50 citation statements)
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“…The implementation of standards (e.g. Hubert et al 2008) is attributed to the overarching success of barcoding (Teletchea 2010) and to this end, the new protocol aims to refine and further advance FISH-BOL best practices for the benefit of the user community. Key to this objective is the widespread adoption of specimen imaging and reporting of identification "confidence levels" as discussed in the new protocol, which also reiterates the importance of a shared informatics workbench, the Barcode of Life Data system (Ratnasingham and Hebert 2007).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The implementation of standards (e.g. Hubert et al 2008) is attributed to the overarching success of barcoding (Teletchea 2010) and to this end, the new protocol aims to refine and further advance FISH-BOL best practices for the benefit of the user community. Key to this objective is the widespread adoption of specimen imaging and reporting of identification "confidence levels" as discussed in the new protocol, which also reiterates the importance of a shared informatics workbench, the Barcode of Life Data system (Ratnasingham and Hebert 2007).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the same year, Tautz et al [5] emphasized the need of a DNAbased taxonomy system, which can act as a scaffold for taxonomic knowledge and as a convenient tool for species identification and description, still to be "firmly anchored within the knowledge, concepts, techniques and infrastructure of traditional taxonomy". Recently, Teletchea [6] drew this same conclusion "after 7 years and 1000 citations". Several studies [e.g., 7,8] document the benefit of complementing the traditional taxonomic data (morphology-based species identification) with molecular tools (DNA-based species identification) for fish species identification.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…At this time, BOLD includes over 1 700 000 barcode sequences from 160 000 named species and many as yet unidentified species, and growing rapidly. Recent reviews of the state of development of barcoding include Waugh (2007), Valentini et al (2008), Casiraghi et al (2010), Teletchea (2010), and Kato et al (2012).…”
Section: The Present Status Of Dna Barcodingmentioning
confidence: 99%