4.6 Article

The Limits of Hyb-Seq for Herbarium Specimens: Impact of Preservation Techniques

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2019.00439

Keywords

alcohol damage; Begonia; degraded DNA; herbarium specimens; hybrid baits; preservation method; target capture

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Funding

  1. Scottish Government's Rural and Environment Science and Analytical Services Division
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [107-2917-I-564-026]

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Over the past 300 years of plant collecting for herbaria, the basic method of preservation has remained remarkably consistent-a plant press with absorbent paper. However, the difficulty of drying plant specimens in the humid tropics has led to a variety of additions to this basic technique, primarily to prevent the specimens succumbing to fungal and bacterial breakdown. These additions include drying gently in tents over low fires, soaking the specimens in alcohol before pressing and, more recently, drying the specimens with forced heat from hair dryers. The process of drying is, however, known to cause breakage and damage to the plant's DNA, as well as providing time for non-plant organisms (bacteria and fungi) to multiply in the tissue, potentially swamping the plant specimen's own DNA. Contemporary plant collectors therefore usually collect a separate sample for DNA work, usually rapidly dried in silica gel desiccant; historical collections, however, may have been treated with alcohol and/or heat. We have recently shown that Hyb-Seq provides a reliable method for retrieving robust sequence data from even very old and degraded herbarium specimens. In this study we have used a panel of specimens preserved using a variety of methods to assess whether Hyb-Seq is capable of retrieving informative amounts of sequence data from duplicate specimens preserved using a range of specimen preservation methods. We present data on the amount and quality of DNA and of sequence data retrieved, the variation in error types between preservation techniques and the utility of the data for phylogenetic analysis.

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