ABSTRACT

DNA Barcoding has been promoted since 2003 as a new, fast, digital genomics-based means of identifying natural species based on the idea that a small standard fragment of any organism’s genome (a so-called ‘micro-genome’) can faithfully identify and help to classify every species on the planet. The fear that species are becoming extinct before they have ever been known fuels barcoders, and the speed, scope, economy and ‘user-friendliness’ claimed for DNA barcoding, as part of the larger ferment around the ‘genomics revolution’, has also encouraged promises that it could inspire humanity to reverse its biodiversity-destructive habits.

This book is based on six years of ethnographic research on changing practices in the identification and classification of natural species. Informed both by Science and Technology Studies (STS) and the anthropology of science, the authors analyse DNA barcoding in the context of a sense of crisis – concerning global biodiversity loss, but also the felt inadequacy of taxonomic science to address such loss. The authors chart the specific changes that this innovation is propelling in the collecting, organizing, analyzing, and archiving of biological specimens and biodiversity data. As they do so they highlight the many questions, ambiguities and contradictions that accompany the quest to create a genomics-based environmental technoscience dedicated to biodiversity protection. They ask what it might mean to recognise ambiguity, contradiction, and excess more publicly as a constitutive part of this and other genomic technosciences.

Barcoding Nature will be of interest to students and scholars of sociology of science, science and technology studies, politics of the environment, genomics and post-genomics, philosophy and history of biology, and the anthropology of science.

chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction

chapter 1a|6 pages

Technical interlude

chapter 2|24 pages

DNA barcoding

Revolution or conciliation?

chapter 3|20 pages

What's in a barcode?

The use, selection and (de)naturalization of genetic markers

chapter 4|21 pages

‘A leg away for DNA'

Mobilizing, compiling and purifying material for DNA barcoding

chapter 5|19 pages

Extending the barcoding frontier

chapter 6|24 pages

Archiving diversity

Bold

chapter 8|18 pages

What is it?

Identifying nature and valuing utility

chapter 9|11 pages

Barcoding nature

Final reflections