'Biodiversity' means the variety of life and it can be studied at different levels (genetic, species, ecosystem) and scales (spatial and temporal). Last decades showed that marine biodiversity has been severely underestimated at all levels. In order to investigate diversity patterns and underlying processes, there is a need to know what species live in the marine environment. An emerging tool for species identification, DNA barcoding can reliably assign unknown specimens to known species, also flagging potential cryptic species and genetically distant populations. This paper will review the role of DNA barcoding for the study of marine biodiversity at the species level. © 2010 by the authors; licensee Molecular Diversity Preservation International, Basel, Switzerland.
CITATION STYLE
Radulovici, A. E., Archambault, P., & Dufresne, F. (2010, April). DNA barcodes for marine biodiversity: Moving fast forward? Diversity. https://doi.org/10.3390/d2040450
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