For 150 years or more, specimens were routinely collected and deposited in natural history collections without preserving fresh tissue samples for genetic analysis. In the case of most herpetological specimens (i.e. amphibians and reptiles), attempts to extract and sequence DNA from formalin-fixed, ethanol-preserved specimens—particularly for use in phylogenetic analyses—has been laborious and largely ineffective due to the highly fragmented nature of the DNA. As a result, tens of thousands of specimens in herpetological collections have not been available for sequence-based phylogenetic studies. Massively parallel High-Throughput Sequencing methods and the associated bioinformatics, however, are particularly suited to recovering meaningful...
Archival, formalin-fixed tissue is an invaluable resource for molecular genetic study, but the utili...
Ancient and archival DNA samples are valuable resources for the study of diverse historical processe...
Intentionally preserved biological material in natural history collections represents a vast reposit...
For 150 years or more, specimens were routinely collected and deposited in natural history collectio...
Museum specimens provide a wealth of information to biologists, but obtaining genetic data from form...
Whether used for understanding species decline or reconstructing evolutionary relationships, collect...
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Museum specimens provide a wealth of information to biologists, but obt...
Natural history collections are repositories of biodiversity and are potentially used by molecular e...
We used Massively Parallel High-Throughput Sequencing to obtain genetic data from a 145-year old hol...
Millions of scientific specimens are housed in museum collections, a large part of which are fluid p...
We used Massively Parallel High-Throughput Sequencing to obtain genetic data from a 145-year old hol...
Tissue sample databases housed in biodiversity archives represent a vast trove of genetic resources,...
In recent years molecular techniques have invaded the marine realm. These techniques are mainly used...
The present paper reports the extraction of DNA from formalin-fixed Pontoporia blainvillei tissues. ...
Archival, formalin-fixed tissue is an invaluable resource for molecular genetic study, but the utili...
Ancient and archival DNA samples are valuable resources for the study of diverse historical processe...
Intentionally preserved biological material in natural history collections represents a vast reposit...
For 150 years or more, specimens were routinely collected and deposited in natural history collectio...
Museum specimens provide a wealth of information to biologists, but obtaining genetic data from form...
Whether used for understanding species decline or reconstructing evolutionary relationships, collect...
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Museum specimens provide a wealth of information to biologists, but obt...
Natural history collections are repositories of biodiversity and are potentially used by molecular e...
We used Massively Parallel High-Throughput Sequencing to obtain genetic data from a 145-year old hol...
Millions of scientific specimens are housed in museum collections, a large part of which are fluid p...
We used Massively Parallel High-Throughput Sequencing to obtain genetic data from a 145-year old hol...
Tissue sample databases housed in biodiversity archives represent a vast trove of genetic resources,...
In recent years molecular techniques have invaded the marine realm. These techniques are mainly used...
The present paper reports the extraction of DNA from formalin-fixed Pontoporia blainvillei tissues. ...
Archival, formalin-fixed tissue is an invaluable resource for molecular genetic study, but the utili...
Ancient and archival DNA samples are valuable resources for the study of diverse historical processe...
Intentionally preserved biological material in natural history collections represents a vast reposit...