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14 August 2018 The importance of applying Standardised Integrative Taxonomy when describing marine benthic organisms and collecting ecological data
Cristina Gioia Di Camillo, Cinzia Gravili, Doris De Vito, Daniela Pica, Stefano Piraino, Stefania Puce, Carlo Cerrano
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Abstract

The decline of morphologically based taxonomy is mainly linked to increasing species redundancy, which probably contributed to a worldwide disinterest in taxonomy, and to a reduction of funding for systematic biology and for expertise training. The present trend in the study of biodiversity is integrated taxonomy, which merges morphological and molecular approaches. At the same time, in many cases new molecular techniques have eclipsed the morphological approach. The application of Standardised Integrative Taxonomy, i.e. a rigorous, common method of description based on the integration between ecological and morphological characteristics, may increase the precision, accessibility, exploitability and longevity of the collected data, and favour the renaissance of taxonomy by new investments in biodiversity exploration.

© CSIRO 2018
Cristina Gioia Di Camillo, Cinzia Gravili, Doris De Vito, Daniela Pica, Stefano Piraino, Stefania Puce, and Carlo Cerrano "The importance of applying Standardised Integrative Taxonomy when describing marine benthic organisms and collecting ecological data," Invertebrate Systematics 32(4), 794-802, (14 August 2018). https://doi.org/10.1071/IS17067
Received: 19 July 2017; Accepted: 8 March 2018; Published: 14 August 2018
KEYWORDS
Darwin core
dataset
ecology
georeferencing
sessile benthos
standardised descriptions
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