Date: January 31, 2017
Source: University of Michigan
Increasingly popular techniques
that infer species boundaries in animals and plants solely by analyzing genetic
differences are flawed and can lead to inflated diversity estimates, according
to a new study from two University of Michigan evolutionary biologists.
Lacey Knowles and Jeet Sukumaran
investigated the accuracy of inferences made by a mathematical model widely
used to quickly determine the boundaries between species without the
time-consuming, painstaking process of comparing specimens in museum
collections.
They found that the genetic
approach, formally known as the multispecies coalescent model, can lead to
species estimates that are five to 13 times higher than the true numbers.
Because the species is the
fundamental unit for all evolutionary and ecological studies, their findings
are expected to have wide-ranging implications, from biodiversity studies to
conservation planning. Their results are scheduled for online publication Jan.
30 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"This is an area that has really
taken off over the last decade. On its surface, the genomic approach looks like
a panacea because it's very fast and doesn't require any kind of taxonomic
expertise," said Knowles, a professor in the U-M Department of Ecology and
Evolutionary Biology and curator of insects at the university's Museum of
Zoology.
"So it's been promoted as a
way to speed up inventories of biodiversity by combining the automation of
genomics with the statistical power of these models. The only problem is, this
method is not doing what we think it is doing, resulting in an overestimate of
species numbers."
The U-M researchers say their
paper serves as both a warning and a call to action -- a warning against
reliance on genomic data alone and a call for new methods to improve
genomic-based species delimitation approaches.
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