“Collections like this are so important because they give us a window into the past that we’ll never be able to replicate,” including insects that have become extinct, Moreau said.
Moreau and colleagues will use new sequencing technologies to gather genetic material from museum specimens without destroying them. In the past, scientists had to grind up an insect to sequence it, but new, nondestructive sampling techniques allow them to remove genetic material from a specimen’s innards, while leaving it externally intact so it can be returned to its pin and displayed. New techniques also allow scientists to study a museum specimen’s gut microbiome, one of Moreau’s research interests as she investigates the role of gut bacteria in an insect’s evolutionary success.
As part of the technological transition, staff will attach a scannable bar code tag next to each insect that will allow researchers to readily pull up relevant documentation, such as a specimen’s loan history, whether its DNA has been extracted and if its image has been taken.
Genetic, microbiome and taxonomic information, images and other records from the Cornell collection will be made available through a publicly available database, called the Global Biodiversity Information Facility. The data follows a standard format to make records from different biological collections sharable across different databases.
Once uploaded, species data becomes part of a network of databases, so any researcher in the world can do a search and find each collection that holds desired specimens. Scientists can do broad searches to understand how climate change may be affecting species distributions based on where specimens across many collections were found over time. They also can compare many individuals in a species to determine how evolutionary pressures may have led to variation.
With the transition to virtual museums, is there a fear that physical collections may lose relevance? Moreau thinks the opposite is true: Now, researchers might conduct an online search, then know where to go to borrow a specimen or which collection to visit for their research.
“As materials get digitized, people become aware of what’s available to study,” she says. “What we see is that as we digitize, people make use of our collections more and more.”
This article also appeared in the Cornell Chronicle.