Abstract

Understanding past and present genetic diversity, in particular in endangered species such as the rhinoceroses, is of paramount importance for a series of aspects in natural history, evolutionary systematics and conservation. As it turned out from several recent studies even in eminent museum specimens the historical context including its provenance often remains unresolved. At the same time modern molecular genetic techniques make this material more and more available also for integrative studies. With probably less than fifty extant specimens, among the Asian rhinoceroses the Javan rhinoceros, Rhinoceros sondaicus, is one of the most critically endangered mammal species, rendering also each of its rare museum specimens of great significance. We here apply available DNA isolation and sequencing techniques to a horn of a specimen housed at the Zoological Museum in Hamburg with indication as to derive from the extinct conspecific Sumatra population. In comparison with already existing mitochondrial gene fragment sequence data of Asian rhino populations, we were able to verify the identification of this particular museum specimen as of the nearly equally rare Sumatran rhinoceros, Dicerorhinus sumatrensis, instead as of the extremely rare R. sondaicus.

Highlights

  • IntroductionPeople and museum specimens have a life history that on the one hand can help to reconstruct past processes of gaining knowledge and on the other hand contribute to a currently emerging new discipline, to be dubbed biohistory; for case studies see e.g

  • People and museum specimens have a life history that on the one hand can help to reconstruct past processes of gaining knowledge and on the other hand contribute to a currently emerging new discipline, to be dubbed biohistory; for case studies see e.g. Glaubrecht and Dohle (2012) and Glaubrecht et al (2013a).Untapped and underutilized for long, museum objects most recently gained a new importance in attempts to reconstruct environmental history in particular with the application of novel molecular genetic techniques

  • In the archives of the Department of Mammalogy we found a simple handwritten note, by the Dutch natural history agent and dealer H

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Summary

Introduction

People and museum specimens have a life history that on the one hand can help to reconstruct past processes of gaining knowledge and on the other hand contribute to a currently emerging new discipline, to be dubbed biohistory; for case studies see e.g. Untapped and underutilized for long, museum objects most recently gained a new importance in attempts to reconstruct environmental history in particular with the application of novel molecular genetic techniques. Advances in this field, in particular new protocols for isolating DNA from preserved materials and generation sequencing, renders museum material a kind of Noah’s Arc for lost genes as it has the potential to mirror the spectrum and assortment of biodiversity on the molecular and genetic level.

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