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SPP 1991:  Taxon-Omics: New approaches for discovering and naming biodiversity

Subject Area Biology
Term since 2017
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 313688472
 
Taxonomy is the science most directly relevant for documenting and understanding changes in biodiversity, whether from species loss or from species introduction. Over the past 10 years, taxonomy has undergone a major shift because of its move towards DNA-based data. This has opened new avenues for collaboration and the ability to answer questions that could not be tackled before. At the same time, we live amid a global wave of biodiversity loss. Modern taxonomic approaches are therefore needed to discover, name, and quantify organismal diversity, which is the basis for documenting, understanding, and confronting changes in biodiversity. The naming of the discovered organisms, using standardized conventions, is the basis for linking new information to existing knowledge, and the resulting classification permits effective communication as well as extrapolation of findings. This priority research program will focus on three areas: (i) discovery and delimitation of species or other evolving units of interest, (ii) accelerating the naming process and generating updatable identification tools, classifications, or monographs, and (iii) Efficient or novel use of natural history collections through automated image analysis, genetic or genomic data from historic specimens or living collections, or new ways of comparing and quantifying traits. This Priority Programme will bring together teams working on the systematics/taxonomy of animals, fungi, plants, or eukaryotic microorganisms, using similar technical and conceptual approaches. Annual meetings will include international speakers who will interact with early-career systematists in small discussion sections, focused on the sharing of both concepts and methods.Approaches to be applied or developed will include automatic specimen identification with computer-vision or barcoding approaches; new tools to utilize internal morphological characters, such as micro-computed tomography (micro-CT); and bioinformatics for species delimitation from high-throughput sequencing (HTS). Phylogenetics is quickly migrating towards HTS data, and some sequencing methods also provide allelic information suitable for coalescent-based phylogenetic analyses at the species level. Exchange of students and collaboration among labs, especially as regards the application of new methods, will strengthen hypothesis-based research in systematics because collaborating PIs will challenge each other intellectually. The proposed program is interdisciplinary in combining taxonomy (a branch of biology), computer science, bioinformatics, and didactics (of biology). This is a unique time for such a priority program because Germany has top-rated natural history collections as well as systematists on the faculties of many of its universities, guaranteeing that this Priority Program will have a disproportionate impact on the academic training of the next generation of taxonomists and comparative biologists.
DFG Programme Priority Programmes
International Connection Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, China, Costa Rica, Czech Republic, Ecuador, Georgia, Indonesia, Ireland, Italy, Norway, Portugal, Russia, Sweden, United Kingdom, USA

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