Molecular Species Delimitation
Molecular species delimitation uses genetic data and statistical models to draw boundaries between species, especially where morphology is ambiguous.
Definition
Molecular species delimitation is the use of genetic data and explicit statistical criteria to hypothesize the number and boundaries of species among a set of sampled organisms.
Scope
This topic covers approaches to inferring species limits from sequence data, including distance-based clustering, tree-based methods, and coalescent multispecies models, the challenge of separating population structure from species boundaries, and the integration of molecular evidence with other lines of data.
Core questions
- How can genetic data be used to infer species boundaries?
- How do coalescent methods distinguish species from population structure?
- Why can a single gene mislead delimitation?
- How is molecular evidence combined with other data to delimit species?
Key theories
- Coalescent species delimitation
- Multispecies coalescent models treat species as separately evolving lineages and use the distribution of gene genealogies across loci to test alternative species boundaries.
- Lineage separation as the species criterion
- Under the unified species concept, delimitation seeks evidence that lineages have separated; molecular data provide one operational line of such evidence among many.
Clinical relevance
Accurate species limits matter where cryptic species differ in pathogenicity, vector competence, or invasive potential, so that surveillance and control target the correct biological entity.
History
Distance-based and tree-based delimitation grew out of barcoding in the 2000s, followed by model-based coalescent methods that formalized the separation of species from population structure; integrative taxonomy now combines these with morphological and ecological evidence.
Debates
- Oversplitting under coalescent models
- Coalescent delimitation can interpret strong population structure as distinct species, prompting debate over how to avoid inflating species counts and how to integrate non-molecular evidence.
Key figures
- Kevin de Queiroz
- Ziheng Yang
Related topics
Seminal works
- dequeiroz2007
- yang2012
- hebert2003
Frequently asked questions
- Can genetic data alone define a species?
- Genetic data provide strong evidence of lineage separation, but many systematists favor integrative delimitation that combines molecular, morphological, and ecological evidence to avoid errors from any single data type.
- Why might molecular delimitation overestimate species numbers?
- Methods sensitive to genetic structure can mistake distinct populations within one species for separate species, especially when only one or few loci are analyzed.