scientific omissions and published negative evidence
Harvey E. Ballard, Jr.
ballardh at OAK.CATS.OHIOU.EDU
Wed Oct 1 08:49:18 CDT 1997
Getting on this other track I see opening up (to veer off the=
Science-Religion debate), and onto scientists admitting error or at least=
reporting "negative evidence"...
I have talked personally with dozens of investigators who found little=
phylogenetically useful sequence variation in certain gene regions that=
have been touted to do so for certain groups in published papers. I am=
thinking specifically of the Internal Transcribed Spacer region of nuclear=
ribosomal DNA, and a number of chloroplast introns and intergenic spacer=
regions (notably the much touted trnT-trnF region). "Negative" evidence=
that these regions show insufficient levels of divergence within a great=
many genera has yet to be captured in a collaborative paper to warn=
researchers against investing substantial funds for sequence data for=
numerous taxa in an all-out attempt. My impression from talking with folks=
whose research spans a diversity of vascular plant genera, is that regions=
routinely mentioned in the recent literature as having great phylogenetic=
utility in fact don't work in the majority of attempts, but that=
these--very costly--exercises have yet to be published in a composite=
manuscript. Where variation has been low, a few researchers have used a=
number of gene regions in combination to get sufficient variation to=
discern reasonably well supported clades. But more than a few researchers=
I know have trusted the PUBLISHED literature as indicative of a=
"fool-proof" region for phylogenetic reconstruction and have spent=
thousands of dollars in an all-out attempt with many taxa, holding a=
handful of synapomorphies to show for the effort.
I would be interested to hear from editors of nationally recognized journals=
about whether, generally, they would accept manuscripts detailing negative=
evidence of this sort--"lack" of phylogenetic information and poor=
systematic utility of some now well known gene regions for many vascular=
plant groups. Such "warning" papers would, I believe, caution some of the=
many over-zealous researchers who only see papers published on the UTILITY=
of certain types of data and not others balancing this perspective. (The=
only recent example of presenting negative evidence--non-utility of the ITS=
region--that I can think of is a 1993 paper by P. Soltis and Kruzoff in=
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution (vol. 2), showing no=
intra-populational variation and virtually nothing useful between the two=
(morphologically very different) species of Lomatium.
I vaguely recall a thread like this several months ago, but I didn't catch=
later whether anyone followed up on collating responses on such "negative=
results" from folks.
Harvey Ballard
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Harvey E. Ballard, Jr., Assistant Professor
Department of Environmental and Plant Biology
Porter Hall
Ohio University
Athens, OH 45701
(614) 593-4659 (office & lab phone)
(614) 593-1130 (fax)
<bold>NOTE: After 7 November, area code =3D 740
</bold>email: ballardh at ohiou.edu
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