Noninvasive sampling of DNA from larval exuvia in diving beetles of the genera Cybister and Dytiscus

2015 
Nonlethal DNA sampling is a highly recommendable method in molecular genetic studies of protected and endangered species. To develop a demonstrably nonlethal method of obtaining DNA from larvae of endangered diving beetles (Cybister brevis, C. lewisianus, C. limbatus, C. rugosus, Dytiscus sharpi sharpi and D. sharpi validus), we obtained the larval exuvia (molted skin) of these endangered diving beetles under laboratory conditions. A single exuvia 24 h after molting was sufficient to allow polymerase chain reaction (PCR) detection of a mitochondrial DNA gene, cytochrome-c oxidase subunit I (COI), and the sequence of the COI gene could be determined directly. Sequences obtained from the exuvial samples were used to further find similarities within DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank. Genomic DNA from the samples was successfully isolated, and we identified the species. This process suggests that exuvia provides a good sample for extracting DNA from endangered diving beetle larvae without killing them.
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