4.5 Article

Ancient DNA preserved in small bone fragments from the PW Lund collection

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages 2064-2071

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7162

Keywords

ancient DNA; bulk bone; metabarcoding; museum collections; palaeontology

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP160104473]
  2. Forrest Research Foundation
  3. Independent Research Fund Denmark
  4. Pawsey Supercomputing Centre

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The Lund collection, dating back to the 1830s and 1840s, is one of the oldest subfossil collections in the world. Through ancient DNA analysis of bone fragments, a high species diversity was found, including two new species, demonstrating the potential for future genetic research on this famous collection.
The Lund collection is one of the oldest subfossil collections in the world. The vast assemblage of subfossils was collected in the 1830s and 1840s by Peter Wilhelm Lund in Lagoa Santa, Brazil, and was shipped to Copenhagen in 1848, where it was stored in various locations around the city with little attention for the future preservation of the collection. So far, successful genetic research on the material collected by Lund has been limited to two samples of human petrous bone. However, less is known about the preservation conditions of the vast amounts of small and fragmentary bones stored in the collection. To address this, we studied ancient DNA from bulk bone samples of approximately 100 bone fragments from the P.W. Lund collection from boxes with varying degrees of physical preservation conditions. Using bulk bone metabarcoding, we found a high species diversity in all samples. In total, we identified 17 species, representing 11 mammals, two birds, one fish, and three frogs. Of these, two species are new to the collection. Collectively, these results exhibit the potential of future genetic studies on the famous P.W. Lund collection and suggest that the effects of poor storage conditions are probably negligible compared with the long-term in situ degradation that specimens undergo before excavation.

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