| Literature DB >> 27366654 |
Soowon Cho1,2, Akito Y Kawahara3, Samantha W Epstein3, Kim Mitter2, Chris A Hamilton3, David Plotkin3, Charles Mitter2.
Abstract
Butterflies and moths (Lepidoptera) comprise significant portions of the world's natural history collections, but a standardized tissue preservation protocol for molecular research is largely lacking. Lepidoptera have traditionally been spread on mounting boards to display wing patterns and colors, which are often important for species identification. Many molecular phylogenetic studies have used legs from pinned specimens as the primary source for DNA in order to preserve a morphological voucher, but the amount of available tissue is often limited. Preserving an entire specimen in a cryogenic freezer is ideal for DNA preservation, but without an easily accessible voucher it can make specimen identification, verification, and morphological work difficult. Here we present a procedure that creates accessible and easily visualized "wing vouchers" of individual Lepidoptera specimens, and preserves the remainder of the insect in a cryogenic freezer for molecular research. Wings are preserved in protective holders so that both dorsal and ventral patterns and colors can be easily viewed without further damage. Our wing vouchering system has been implemented at the University of Maryland (AToL Lep Collection) and the University of Florida (Florida Museum of Natural History, McGuire Center of Lepidoptera and Biodiversity), which are among two of the largest Lepidoptera molecular collections in the world.Entities:
Keywords: Biodiversity; Genomics; Lepidoptera; Museum; Natural history collections; Taxonomy
Year: 2016 PMID: 27366654 PMCID: PMC4924120 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Preparation of small to medium-sized Lepidoptera wing vouchers (A–J).
(A) specimen is removed from a Whirl-Pak; (B & C) right wings are cut off at the base and removed; (D) specimen is placed into a storage tube with ≥95% ethanol for DNA preservation; (E) labels are added to the tube; (F & G) wings are placed in the clear window of a coin holder, spread out with forceps; (H) coin holder is closed and edges are stapled to keep the wings secure; (I & J) labels are glued on the top right and bottom right corners of the coin holder.
Figure 2Preparation of large Lepidoptera wing vouchers (A–H).
(A & B) following removal of the specimen from ethanol, dried wings are placed inside a BOPP bag, which is then trimmed to wing size; (C) trimmed BOPP bag with wings and corresponding labels is placed within a thermal laminating pouch; (D & E) pouch is laminated 2–3 times to ensure a tight seal; (F–H) voucher is trimmed to size with scissors, cutting around the specimen and labels in a rectangle with slightly rounded edges; (I–K) Stored wing vouchers in binders. (I) Coin holder wing vouchers for small moths; (J) laminated wing vouchers for large moths. (K) Wing vouchers stored in binders on shelf.