A global decline in pollinator abundance and diversity has demanded increased research attention to the ecology and genetics of bumblebees. However, as progressively more restrictions are placed on sampling for insects, researchers are increasingly obliged to use archival specimens collected for purposes other than genetic analyses. In this study we assessed the suitability, for population genetic studies, of popular, low-cost methods for preservation and storage of bumblebee specimens. Specimens of Bombus terrestris L. were held under six storage regimes for up to two years. DNA was extracted from the samples using three extraction protocols and the quality of the DNA was examined using PCR amplification of a mitochondrial and a nuclear gene. All extraction and storage methods provided sufficient DNA for successful PCR amplification. However, samples preserved in acetone or at freezing temperatures yielded the highest DNA concentrations. DNA yields from pinned specimens at room temperature declined over time, particularly when using standard extraction techniques. DNA concentrations were significantly lower from specimens preserved in 70% ethanol compared to all other extraction techniques and declined linearly over the two years of storage. These results indicate that two of the most popular insect storage methods (pinning and storage in ethanol) should be avoided for the long-term preservation of genetic material for future studies. We suggest that optimal insect preservation methods should be incorporated into research protocols in order to best capitalise on limited collection opportunities., António S. Moreira ... []., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
Many gregarious insects aggregate in naturally occurring refuges on their host plants. However, when refuges are filled, they may be forced to aggregate on exposed areas of the plant. This study examines the effects of refuge saturation on group size and defence against parasitism in larvae of Ammalo helops Cramer (Lepidoptera: Arctiidae) that form day-resting groups on the trunks of weeping laurel, Ficus benjamina L., in El Salvador. Population densities, group sizes and parasitism were recorded on eight trees for each of four generations in 1995 and 1996. When population densities were low, all larvae were located in small groups in naturally occurring structural refuges (rotted out holes, spaces between crossing branches and under aerial roots) on the host plant. In contrast, when population densities were high and structural refuges were full, many larvae formed significantly larger groups (density refuges) on the open trunk. Between 20 and 24% of late-instar larvae were parasitized and this was inversely dependent on the size of within tree populations, in spite of populations being fragmented among structural refuges. Similarly, in a study carried out at a different location on young trees without structural refuges, parasitism of larvae was inversely related to group size. Although parasitism rates decreased with increasing group size, most larvae preferentially selected the small naturally occurring refuges, where groups were restricted to low densities. If this behaviour is an adaptive trait, I speculate that parasitism (or some other unmeasured mortality factor) is lower in naturally occurring refuges than in large open groups.