Abstract
Both classical taxonomy andDNA barcoding are engaged in the task of digitizing the living world.Much of the taxonomic literature remains undigitized. The rise of open access publishing this century and the freeing of older literature from the shackles of copyright have greatly increased the online availability of taxonomic descriptions, but much of the literature of the mid-to latetwentieth century remains offline (‘dark texts’). DNA barcoding is generating a wealth of computable data that in many ways are much easier to work with than classical taxonomic descriptions, but many of the sequences are not identified to species level. These ‘dark taxa’ hamper the classical method of integrating biodiversity data, using shared taxonomic names. Voucher specimens are a potential common currency of both the taxonomic literature and sequence databases, and could be used to help link names, literature and sequences. An obstacle to this approach is the lack of stable, resolvable specimen identifiers. The paper concludes with an appeal for a global ‘digital dashboard’ to assess the extent towhich biodiversity data are available online.
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CITATION STYLE
Page, R. D. M. (2016). DNA barcoding and taxonomy: Dark taxa and dark texts. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 371(1702). https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2015.0334
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