Authors
Mark W Chase, Nicolas Salamin, Mike Wilkinson, James M Dunwell, Rao Prasad Kesanakurthi, Nadia Haidar, Vincent Savolainen
Publication date
2005/10/29
Source
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
360
Issue
1462
Pages
1889-1895
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Land plants have had the reputation of being problematic for DNA barcoding for two general reasons: (i) the standard DNA regions used in algae, animals and fungi have exceedingly low levels of variability and (ii) the typically used land plant plastid phylogenetic markers (e.g. rbcL, trnL-F, etc.) appear to have too little variation. However, no one has assessed how well current phylogenetic resources might work in the context of identification (versus phylogeny reconstruction). In this paper, we make such an assessment, particularly with two of the markers commonly sequenced in land plant phylogenetic studies, plastid rbcL and internal transcribed spacers of the large subunits of nuclear ribosomal DNA (ITS), and find that both of these DNA regions perform well even though the data currently available in GenBank/EBI were not produced to be used as barcodes and BLAST searches are not an ideal tool for this …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MW Chase, N Salamin, M Wilkinson, JM Dunwell… - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B …, 2005