Abstract
I begin with a description of the benefits
and limits of DNA barcoding as presented by its advocates not
its critics. Next, I argue that due to the mutually dependent relationship
between defining and delimiting species, all systems
of classification are grounded in theory, even if only implicitly.
I then proceed to evaluate DNA barcoding in that context. In
particular, I focus on the barcoders’ use of a sharp boundary
by which to delimit species, arguing that this boundary brings
along additional theoretical commitments inconsistent with
the way taxonomists conceive of species, viz., as entities that
have vague boundaries and that cannot be defined by any single
attribute other than ancestry. Given these inconsistencies, I
conclude that even if groupings based on DNA barcodes match
those of an existing taxonomy, the two systems of classification
are not necessarily tracking the same entities, i.e., species.