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Wednesday, September 29, 2010
DNA barcode library to launch in Toronto
OTTAWA (AFP) – An international consortium of geneticists on Saturday will activate a DNA barcode library in Toronto representing almost 80,000 species, the International Barcode of Life Project (iBOL) announced.
The aim is to eventually build a digital identification system for all life on Earth to reduce the time and cost of species identification.
DNA barcoding, which identifies species using a short DNA sequence from a standard location on the genome, will also be a vital tool for conservation and for monitoring species that have adverse impacts on human health and economic wellbeing, he said.
More than 25 countries are involved in the project.
Work over the past five years has produced barcode records for almost 80,000 species.
By 2015, consortium members are expected to have entered DNA barcode records from five million specimens representing half a million species into the interactive Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD) databank, and eventually all of Earth's animal, plant and fungal species.
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