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Modern Coral Taxonomy Requires Reproducible Data Alongside Field Observations—Comments on Veron et al. (2025)

Title: Modern Coral Taxonomy Requires Reproducible Data Alongside Field Observations—Comments on Veron et al. (2025)
Authors: Peter F. Cowman; Tom C. L. Bridge; Tracy D. Ainsworth; Francesca Benzoni; Victor Bonito; Ann Budd; Patrick Cabaitan; Emma F. Camp; Chaolun Allen Chen; Sean R. Connolly; Augustine J. Crosbie; Joana Figueiredo; Douglas Fenner; Zac Forsman; Hironobu Fukami; Catherine E. I. Head; Bert W. Hoeksema; Danwei Huang; Marcelo V. Kitahara; Nancy Knowlton; Chao-Yang Kuo; Mei-Fang Lin; Joshua S. Madin; Hanaka Mera; Keiichi Nomura; Nicolas Oury; Andrea M. Quattrini; Kate M. Quigley; Sage H. Rassmussen; Kaveh Samimi-Namin; Frederic Sinniger; David J. Suggett; Andrew H. Baird
Source: Diversity, Vol 18, Iss 2, p 60 (2026)
Publisher Information: MDPI AG, 2026.
Publication Year: 2026
Collection: LCC:Biology (General)
Subject Terms: integrative taxonomy; phylogenomics; Scleractinia; Acropora; reticulate evolution; species delimitation; Biology (General); QH301-705.5
Description: The recent review by Veron et al. (2025) posits that quantitative genomic evidence used to understand coral evolution should be secondary to species hypotheses derived from expert opinion based on field experience. The authors argue that morphological “biological entities” should take precedence over molecular evidence when conflicts arise. This perspective required the rejection of extensive, independent molecular datasets that have progressively converged on a robust evolutionary framework for reef corals. Here, we reaffirm how prioritising subjective visual assessments over quantitative genetic and genomic data is methodologically unsound and scientifically regressive. We reject the framing of this perspective as “morphology versus molecules”. Rather, it is a fundamental divergence between two opposing philosophies: a static system anchored in non-reproducible expert judgement, and an integrative framework where genetic data provide the necessary independent test of morphological hypotheses. We show how a reliance on “field entities” obscures true morphological patterns by failing to distinguish between phenotypic plasticity, convergence, and evolutionary divergence. Effective taxonomy requires species hypotheses to be testable, and to stand or fall on the strength of reproducible evidence. Such a framework does not replace morphology; it validates it by providing an explicit, testable basis for evaluating morphological hypotheses. The integration of testable, reproducible molecular analysis with other lines of evidence including morphology is the benchmark of modern taxonomy across all Kingdoms of Life. We address the logical inconsistencies in the general arguments put forward by Veron et al. (2025) and refute their specific rejection of recent Acropora species-level revision with reproducible data.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
ISSN: 1424-2818
Relation: https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/18/2/60; https://doaj.org/toc/1424-2818
DOI: 10.3390/d18020060
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/4ec8bd2ce96f4b7fbcaebdd19f36d253
Accession Number: edsdoj.4ec8bd2ce96f4b7fbcaebdd19f36d253
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals