首页> 外文期刊>Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution >Who, Where, What, Wren? Using Ancient DNA to Examine the Veracity of Museum Specimen Data: A Case Study of the New Zealand Rock Wren (Xenicus gilviventris)
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Who, Where, What, Wren? Using Ancient DNA to Examine the Veracity of Museum Specimen Data: A Case Study of the New Zealand Rock Wren (Xenicus gilviventris)

机译:谁,哪里,什么,W?使用古代DNA检验博物馆标本数据的准确性:以新西兰Rock(Xenicus gilviventris)为例

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Museum specimens provide a record of past species distribution and are an increasingly important resource for conservation genetic research. The scientific value of these specimens depends upon the veracity of their associated data and can be compromised by inaccurate details; including taxonomic identity, collection locality, and collector. New Zealand contains many endemic species that have been driven to extinction or reduced to relict distributions following the arrival of humans and mammalian predators, including the Acanthisittid wrens (of which only two of the eight species presently persist). One of these is the New Zealand rock wren (Xenicus gilviventris), currently classified as an endangered species and experiencing ongoing population declines. Here we analyse ancient DNA retrieved from New Zealand rock wren museum skins to establish the veracity of their recorded collection localities – New Zealand rock wrens exhibit strong north-south genetic structuring along the Southern Alps of New Zealand’s South Island. We include the only specimen reportedly collected from New Zealand’s North Island, outside the known range of New Zealand rock wrens, specimens collected by Henry Hamersley Travers, a collector known for poor record keeping and potentially fraudulent specimen data, and type specimens of proposed Xenicus taxa. Multiple instances of inaccurate collection locality were detected, including that of the New Zealand rock wren reportedly collected from the North Island, which matches individuals from the southern South Island. Syntypes of X. haasti, and a syntype of X. gilviventris clustered with individuals belonging to the northern New Zealand rock wren lineage. Our results suggest that New Zealand rock wrens have not been historically extirpated from New Zealand’s North Island, and that caution must be taken when utilising museum specimens to inform conservation management decisions. Additionally, we describe the type locality of both X. gilviventris and X. haasti, with genetic and historical evidence suggesting that the specimens used to describe these taxa were collected from the headwaters of the Rakaia River. This study demonstrates that ancient DNA analysis can add value to museum specimens by revealing incorrect specimen data and inform the conservation management and taxonomy of endangered species.
机译:博物馆标本提供了过去物种分布的记录,并且是保护遗传研究的日益重要的资源。这些标本的科学价值取决于其相关数据的准确性,并且可能因细节不正确而受到损害。包括分类标识,收集地点和收集者。新西兰有许多地方性物种,其中包括人类can和哺乳动物的掠食者到来后被驱逐到灭绝或减少为遗迹的分布,包括棘齿can(Acanthisittid two)(目前仅八个物种中的两个存在)。其中之一是新西兰rock(Xenicus gilviventris),目前被列为濒危物种,并且种群数量持续下降。在这里,我们对从新西兰岩w博物馆的表皮中提取的古代DNA进行分析,以确定其所记录的收藏地点的真实性–新西兰岩w在新西兰南岛的南阿尔卑斯山地区展现出强大的南北遗传结构。我们包括据报道从新西兰北岛收集的唯一标本,不在新西兰岩rock的已知范围内,由亨利·哈默斯利·特拉弗斯(Henry Hamersley Travers)收集的标本(以不良的记录保存和潜在的标本数据而闻名)以及拟议的Xenicus分类群标本。发现了多个不准确的采集地点,包括据报道从北岛采集的新西兰岩rock,与南南南部的个体相匹配。哈斯特氏菌的同种型和吉尔维氏酵母的同种型聚集在一起,这些个体属于新西兰北部的岩石w谱系。我们的结果表明,新西兰的岩w在历史上并未从新西兰的北岛上消失过,因此在利用博物馆标本来告知保护管理决策时必须格外小心。此外,我们描述了X. gilviventris和X. haasti的类型局部性,遗传和历史证据表明,用来描述这些分类群的标本是从Rakaia河的源头收集的。这项研究表明,古老的DNA分析可以通过揭示不正确的标本数据来为博物馆标本增值,并为濒危物种的保护管理和分类学提供信息。

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