Literature DB >> 24415467

Plant taxonomy: a historical perspective, current challenges, and perspectives.

Germinal Rouhan1, Myriam Gaudeul.   

Abstract

Taxonomy is the science that explores, describes, names, and classifies all organisms. In this introductory chapter, we highlight the major historical steps in the elaboration of this science that provides baseline data for all fields of biology and plays a vital role for society but is also an independent, complex, and sound hypothesis-driven scientific discipline.In a first part, we underline that plant taxonomy is one of the earliest scientific disciplines that emerged thousands of years ago, even before the important contributions of Greeks and Romans (e.g., Theophrastus, Pliny the Elder, and Dioscorides). In the fifteenth to sixteenth centuries, plant taxonomy benefited from the Great Navigations, the invention of the printing press, the creation of botanic gardens, and the use of the drying technique to preserve plant specimens. In parallel with the growing body of morpho-anatomical data, subsequent major steps in the history of plant taxonomy include the emergence of the concept of natural classification, the adoption of the binomial naming system (with the major role of Linnaeus) and other universal rules for the naming of plants, the formulation of the principle of subordination of characters, and the advent of the evolutionary thought. More recently, the cladistic theory (initiated by Hennig) and the rapid advances in DNA technologies allowed to infer phylogenies and to propose true natural, genealogy-based classifications.In a second part, we put the emphasis on the challenges that plant taxonomy faces nowadays. The still very incomplete taxonomic knowledge of the worldwide flora (the so-called taxonomic impediment) is seriously hampering conservation efforts that are especially crucial as biodiversity enters its sixth extinction crisis. It appears mainly due to insufficient funding, lack of taxonomic expertise, and lack of communication and coordination. We then review recent initiatives to overcome these limitations and to anticipate how taxonomy should and could evolve. In particular, the use of molecular data has been era-splitting for taxonomy and may allow an accelerated pace of species discovery. We examine both strengths and limitations of such techniques in comparison to morphology-based investigations, we give broad recommendations on the use of molecular tools for plant taxonomy, and we highlight the need for an integrative taxonomy based on evidence from multiple sources.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24415467     DOI: 10.1007/978-1-62703-767-9_1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Methods Mol Biol        ISSN: 1064-3745


  3 in total

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Authors:  Jian-Jun Zhou; Xun-Lin Yu; Yun-Fei Deng; Hai-Fei Yan; Zhe-Li Lin
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-07-22       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Phenotypic Variation in European Wild Pear (Pyrus pyraster (L.) Burgsd.) Populations in the North-Western Part of the Balkan Peninsula.

Authors:  Antonio Vidaković; Zlatko Šatović; Katarina Tumpa; Marilena Idžojtić; Zlatko Liber; Valentino Pintar; Mira Radunić; Tonka Ninčević Runjić; Marko Runjić; Jakša Rošin; Daniel Gaunt; Igor Poljak
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-01-27

3.  LCVP, The Leipzig catalogue of vascular plants, a new taxonomic reference list for all known vascular plants.

Authors:  Martin Freiberg; Marten Winter; Alessandro Gentile; Alexander Zizka; Alexandra Nora Muellner-Riehl; Alexandra Weigelt; Christian Wirth
Journal:  Sci Data       Date:  2020-11-26       Impact factor: 6.444

  3 in total

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