GGBN Object - https://id.ggbn.org/30Y6JS https://id.ggbn.org/30Y6JS

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Material Entity: specimen

Disposition: In collection

Identifier Status: ACTIVE

Last Update: January 30, 2025

Identification

Accepted NameAcleris semiannula (Robinson, 1869)
TaxonomyAnimalia > Arthropoda > Insecta > Lepidoptera > Tortricidae > Acleris
Name According toCatalogue of Life
Original NameAcleris semiannula Robinson, 1869
Taxonomy Original NameAnimalia > Arthropoda > Insecta > Lepidoptera > Tortricidae > Acleris > semiannula
Status Original Nameaccepted species
Resolving Stateresolved on species level

Gathering

CountryCanada (Central or North America)
LocalityWellington County|Puslinch Township|Concession 11/Hume Rd
Latitude | Longitude43.53 | -80.13
BiotopeTemperate mixed forest
Collector(s)Paul Hebert
Collector's numbers.n.
Collection Date2010-04-17
Collecting Sourcenot provided

Specimen

GUID/Occurrence IDBIOUG02835-A02
Catalog NumberPAAPR1697-12
Collection CodeBIOUG
Institution CodeUniversity of Guelph, Centre for Biodiversity Genomics
Institution Full NameCentre for Biodiversity Genomics
Record BasisPreservedSpecimen
Sample Typespecimen
Establishment Meansnot provided

Publications

Hebert, PD. et al., 2016. Counting animal species with DNA barcodes: Canadian insects. Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 371(1702)

Recent estimates suggest that the global insect fauna includes fewer than six million species, but this projection is very uncertain because taxonomic work has been limited on some highly diverse groups. Validation of current estimates minimally requires the investigation of all lineages that are diverse enough to have a substantial impact on the final species count. This study represents a first step in this direction; it employs DNA barcoding to evaluate patterns of species richness in 27 orders of Canadian insects. The analysis of over one million specimens revealed species counts congruent with earlier results for most orders. However, Diptera and Hymenoptera were unexpectedly diverse, representing two-thirds of the 46 937 barcode index numbers (=species) detected. Correspondence checks between known species and barcoded taxa showed that sampling was incomplete, a result confirmed by extrapolations from the barcode results which suggest the occurrence of at least 94 000 species of insects in Canada, a near doubling from the prior estimate of 54 000 species. One dipteran family, the Cecidomyiidae, was extraordinarily diverse with an estimated 16 000 species, a 10-fold increase from its predicted diversity. If Canada possesses about 1% of the global fauna, as it does for known taxa, the results of this study suggest the presence of 10 million insect species with about 1.8 million of these taxa in the Cecidomyiidae. If so, the global species count for this fly family may exceed the combined total for all 142 beetle families. If extended to more geographical regions and to all hyperdiverse groups, DNA barcoding can rapidly resolve the current uncertainty surrounding a species count for the animal kingdom. A newly detailed understanding of species diversity may illuminate processes important in speciation, as suggested by the discovery that the most diverse insect lineages in Canada employ an unusual mode of reproduction, haplodiploidy.This article is part of the themed issue 'From DNA barcodes to biomes'.

PubMed 436,135 GGBN records

Dataset Description

Centre for Biodiversity Genomics - Canadian Specimens

DescriptionThe Centre for Biodiversity Genomics (CBG) at the University of Guelph is spearheading a novel approach to biodiversity research within Canada and internationally. Its three research units -- CBG Collections, CBG Genomics (or the Canadian Centre for DNA Barcoding, CCDB) and CBG Informatics -- are advancing 21st century biodiversity science by enabling species identification and discovery that is based on the analysis of sequence diversity in short, standardized gene regions, DNA barcodes. CBG Collections maintains a globally unique natural history collection of 3.3 million specimens. Every specimen is digitized, and the exact storage location of each specimen is tracked in a collection management information system for quick reference and retrieval. The databased information for every voucher is also archived in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD; www.boldsystems.org), permitting the permanent storage, validation and analysis of barcode sequence data and associated specimen metadata. Most (88.6%) of the specimens have been DNA barcoded, and a few representatives of every species have been digitally imaged. The CCDB holds high quality DNA extracts in a secure 2000 ft2 ultra-cold freezer bank. These DNA extracts reflect residual material following the barcode analysis of samples; it contains 5.3 million extracts from over 250,000 species derived from 231 countries, oceans and dependent territories, all connected to a voucher specimen on BOLD. This resource represents the Canadian specimens held in the Specimen Archives of CBG Collections as of Dec 2017. Please address inquiries to ccdbcol@uoguelph.ca
RightsThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC-BY-NC) 4.0 License.
CitationTelfer A, Sones JE and deWaard JR (2018): Centre for Biodiversity Genomics - Canadian Specimens. v1.4. University of Guelph. Dataset/Occurrence. https://ipt.uoguelph.ca/ipt/resource?r=cbg_canadian_specimens&v=1.4

Contacts

Collections Manager
Jayme Sones, jsones@uoguelph.ca , 50 Stone Road East, Ontario CA, N1G 2W1, 15198244120
Data Management Lead, Collections
Angela Telfer, atelfer@uoguelph.ca , 50 Stone Road East, ON CA, N1G2W1, 15198244120
Associate Director, Collections
Jeremy deWaard, dewaardj@uoguelph.ca , 50 Stone Road East, ON CA, N1G 2W1, 5198244120

Loan information

not blocked specimen available for loan

Disposition: In collection

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