SEMINAR: Friday July 30 1999, 11:00 am Lister Hill Center (NIH BLdg 38A), 8th floor conference room Ian Harrison Department of Ichthyology, Division of Vertebrate Zoology American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024 is a candidate for the NCBI/Genbank taxonomist position. The title and abstract of his seminar are appended below. Detlef TAXONOMIC ISSUES ASSOCIATED WITH ANALYZING RECENT EXTINCTIONS Extinctions are often portrayed as the prime indicator that human impacts on global ecosystems have become increasingly deleterious in the last several hundred years. However, existing lists of extinction organisms are not accurate. This is partly because of taxonomic inconsistencies that have resulted from the application of different species concepts, and from an incomplete understanding of the taxonomy of the species in question. Taxonomic rigor has often been overlooked in favor of ecological information, despite the fact that this ecological information is meaningless if it cannot be reliably attributed to the correct species. Furthermore, systematic evaluations of extinctions in groups of related species are useful to both evolutionary and conservation biologists. Quantitative investigations of the relationship between species loss and the loss of evolutionary information can describe the direct contribution that a species makes to the evolutionary content of a phylogeny. Thus, a reliable analysis of the patterns of phylogenetic relationships is necessary prior to defining conservation priorities.