[Taxacom] Why Taxonomy does NOT matter
Bob Mesibov
mesibov at southcom.com.au
Fri Apr 22 23:56:04 CDT 2011
The money goes to, and the work gets done, by real people, so I prefer to follow the money at that level, rather than think about taxonomy in the abstract. Matter of taste...
And I'm just as annoyed as you are at seeing molecular studies which aren't followed up by solid taxonomy sensu Thorpe. Now that would make an interesting project: sample a few hundred of those 'we-found-cryptic-species' papers from, say, 2000-2005, to see how many of those molecular suspicions got translated into Code-compliant names. Excluding, of course, those largely useless papers (some flagged here on Taxacom) in which the molecular characters *alone* were used to diagnose the new species.
But from the point of view of you and I as individual taxonomists,is there a whole lot of difference between a drawerful of pinned undescribeds and a molecular cladogram with 'deep' divisions separating dubiously named terminals? They both represent work to be done by us or other taxonomists, part of the world's gigantic Biodiversity Backlog.
The 'hybrid solution', which (from what you write) seems to be missing in NZ, would be to get funding for multi-investigator projects that look at *all* the available material for a taxon, and generate solid Linnean taxonomy, plausibly inferred relationships from morphological and molecular data, and freely available online outputs (Donat?). If that sounds familiar, it's what the Planetary Biodiversity Inventories (http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=103065) aim for.
The sad truth is that there isn't a hope of getting PBI-style coverage for anything but a miniscule proportion of Life. Which is why morphotaxonomists like me plod along genus by genus on no or very little public funding, and why molecular phylogeneticists live from short-term grant to grant, and why both groups raise skeptical eyebrows at all the noise coming from the acronyms.
--
Dr Robert Mesibov
Honorary Research Associate
Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, and
School of Zoology, University of Tasmania
Home contact: PO Box 101, Penguin, Tasmania, Australia 7316
Ph: (03) 64371195; 61 3 64371195
Webpage: http://www.qvmag.tas.gov.au/?articleID=570
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