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Current and Future CBOL Initiatives. Consortium for the Barcode of Life National Museum of Natural History Smithsonian Institution http://www.barcoding.si.edu 202/633-0808; fax 202/633-2938. CBOL’s Underlying Principles. Respond to taxonomists, other disciplines, applied user communities
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Current and Future CBOL Initiatives Consortium for the Barcode of Life National Museum of Natural History Smithsonian Institution http://www.barcoding.si.edu 202/633-0808; fax 202/633-2938 Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
CBOL’s Underlying Principles • Respond to taxonomists, other disciplines, applied user communities • Coordination/Facilitation of Bottom-Up activities • Minimalisim (organizational) – build on existing activities rather than constructing new ones • Standardization, cost-effectiveness • Minimalism (scientific) – fewest possible regions • Tangible, realistic goals, near-term results • Global participation Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
CBOL-Initiated Projects • Fish Barcode of Life (FISH-BOL) • 30,000 marine/freshwater species by 2010 • All Birds Barcoding Initiative (ABBI) • 10,000 species by 2010 • Tephritid fruit flies • 2,000 pest/beneficial species and relatives by 2008 • Mosquitoes • 3,300 species by 2008 • Freshwater Macroinvertebrates • Water Quality of Maryland streams, with US-EPA • Early planning stage: • African scale insects, Bushmeat Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
Projects initiated by others • Marine Zooplankton (CMarZ): Marine habitat, multiple taxa • All-Leps: Multiple regions/habitats, single taxon • BioCode, Moorea: Single location, multiple habitats, multiple taxa Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
Launching CBOL Projects Assembling Steering Committee • Users • Taxonomists, collection curators • Service providers (BOLD, DNA labs, training) • Plan for scope, timetable, logistics • Pilot tests of primers, PCR amplification • Assemble pipeline of specimens to lab • Address other logistical issues Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
Logistical Issues • The Organization: By taxonomy? Geography? Application? • The Taxonomic Framework: Consensus list of species • The Sampling Strategy • The Supply Chain • The Data: Assembling and comparing data • The Funding • The Resulting Publications Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
The Organization FISH-BOL and ABBI: • Regional Working Groups • Steering Committee • Campaign coordinator Mosquitoes and Tephritids: • Highly centralized committee/coordinator Bushmeat: • Mix of users, diverse taxonomists Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
Networks Model 2: by location or ecosystem Bold/GenBank Collection Genoscope Taxon name MNHN Extraction facility Unidentifiedvouchers ‘morphospecies’ Identified voucher Research projects Panglao, Santo Researchproject BOA Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
The Taxonomic Framework FISH-BOL: Catalyzed consensus list of: • FishBase • Catalog of Fishes • Integrated Taxonomic Information System ABBI: Published species checklist • Cross-check with Species2000, ITIS Mosquitoes and Tephritids: • Checklists developed by users Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
The Sampling Strategy How many specimens per species per area? • Under study by Data Analysis WG • FISH-BOL, ABBI: • 5 per species from across geographic range • Minimum one whole voucher per species • Intensive sampling for some species What qualifies as a voucher? Varies widely: • Gold standard museum study specimens • Invasive non-destructive extraction sampling • Totally destructive sampling with e-Voucher Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
The Supply Chain • Sources of specimens: • Museum collections ($) • Piggyback on existing field programs ($$) • Dedicated new collecting efforts ($$$$$) • Permits for collecting/international transfer • Expert identification • Data capture, digital imaging, tissue sampling • Curation of voucher specimens, tissue samples, DNA extracts • Moving samples (or extracts or PCR products) to sequencers Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
The Data (1) • Assembling and comparing data • CBOL recommends BOLD with subsequent upload to INSDC • Curation and quality control • CBOL/INSDC have established standards, capability to maintain data accuracy • Long-term responsibility of barcoding community Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
The Data (2) • Ownership, pre-release access • Project-specific policies • Attitudes range from very open to more protective • Timing of data release • Controlled by owner of data • CBOL urges early release, except for tight connections to hypothesis-driven publications Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
The Funding Engage the potential users from the start: • On the Steering Committee, setting priorities • Give repeated presentations to expanding audiences; work toward top policy-makers • Keep them informed of progress Some foundations will take risks, act as catalysts Other foundations will like low-risk projects of which they can take ownership Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006
The Resulting Publications • Pilot studies demonstrating effectiveness of barcode region in a new taxon • Regional barcode surveys of a taxon, noting trends toward lumping or splitting • Use of barcodes in ecological, evolutionary studies, applied projects • Progress reports from barcoding campaigns • Synthetic studies of regions, habitats, taxa • Formal taxonomic revisions Eastern Africa Regional Meeting, Nairobi, 18 October 2006