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Has taxonomic vandalism gone too far? A case study, the rise of the pay-to-publish model and the pitfalls of Morchella systematics

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Abstract

The genus Morchella has gone through turbulent taxonomic treatments. Although significant progress in Morchella systematics has been achieved in the past decade, several problems remain unresolved and taxonomy in the genus is still in flux. In late 2019, a paper published in the open-access journal Scientific Reports raised serious concerns about the taxonomic stability of the genus, but also about the future of academic publishing. The paper, entitled “High diversity of Morchella and a novel lineage of the esculenta clade from the north Qinling Mountains revealed by GCPSR-based study” by Phanpadith and colleagues, suffered from gross methodological errors, included false results and artifactual phylogenies, had misapplied citations throughout, and proposed a new species name invalidly. Although the paper was eventually retracted by Scientific Reports in 2021, the fact that such an overtly flawed and scientifically unsound paper was published in a high-ranked Q1 journal raises alarming questions about quality controls and safekeeping procedures in scholarly publishing. Using this paper as a case study, we provide a critical review on the pitfalls of Morchella systematics followed by a series of recommendations for the delimitation of species, description of taxa, and ultimately for a sustainable taxonomy in Morchella. Problems and loopholes in the academic publishing system are also identified and discussed, and additional quality controls in the pre- and post-publication stages are proposed.

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Acknowledgements

We are grateful to all those who expressed their encouragement and support from the conceptualization to the drafting and completion of this review.

Funding

The contribution of TG was supported by research project J4-1766 “Methodology approaches in genome-based diversity and ecological plasticity study of truffles from their natural distribution areas” and the Research Program in Forest Biology, Ecology and Technology (P4-0107), all of the Slovenian Research Agency.

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ML conceptualized and initiated this review with the help of MS and BA. ML wrote the first draft of the manuscript together with JMB who wrote the first draft of the phylogenetic part. JMB also designed Figs. 1 and 2. PA contributed significant edits and additions to the entire manuscript, especially the phylogenetic part and recommendations. ML, JMB, BA, VH, PA, GM, and GZ contributed to the point-by-point critique of Phanpadith et al. (2019). ML, JMB, and PAM compiled and edited the taxonomic, nomenclatural, phylogenetic, and phylogeographic information provided in Table 1. ML drafted Table 2 with significant help from PAM and GZ on key terminology. All other authors provided useful edits, suggestions, and support the recommendations proposed in this review. All authors are unanimous in their demand for more stringent quality controls in academic publishing.

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Correspondence to Michael Loizides.

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The authors declare no competing interests.

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Section editor: Roland Kirschner

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Loizides, M., Alvarado, P., Moreau, PA. et al. Has taxonomic vandalism gone too far? A case study, the rise of the pay-to-publish model and the pitfalls of Morchella systematics. Mycol Progress 21, 7–38 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11557-021-01755-z

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11557-021-01755-z

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