Biodiversity Data Journal (Jun 2024)

Preserving morphology while extracting DNA: a non-destructive field-to-museum protocol for slide-mounted specimens

  • Santiago Jaume-Schinkel,
  • Björn Müller,
  • Sergio Avila-Calero,
  • Sandra Kukowka,
  • Vera Rduch,
  • Ximo Mengual

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.12.e119448
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
pp. 1 – 21

Abstract

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Our study aimed to develop an optimised laboratory protocol ensuring the preservation of morphological structures and extraction of high-quality DNA sequences from Psychodidae (Insecta, Diptera) specimens. With 310 analysed specimens, we investigated the impact of distinct laboratory treatments by employing two shaking categories (constant and interrupted) with five different incubation periods (16, 12, 8, 4 and 2 hours) during the DNA extraction process. Notably, 80.65% of the specimens exhibited morphological changes during DNA extraction. Our results indicated no statistical difference between constant and interrupted shaking for the total of morphological structures lost. However, within each shaking category, the loss of structures was influenced significantly by the incubation period. Prolonged incubation correlated with increased structural losses, whereas shorter incubation periods caused minor alterations in structures lost. In addition, our results showed a significant difference between constant and interrupted shaking treatments for DNA concentration. Likewise, the incubation period showed differences within each shaking category. Successful COI sequencing was achieved in 89.6% of specimens, with negligible differences in DNA fragment lengths across treatments. Our findings underscore the importance of an optimised protocol and its potential in systematic research involving nematoceran dipteran specimens by balancing morphological integrity and DNA extraction efficiency.

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