Hidden or extinct? Genome analysis of a 120-year-old torpedo ray specimen confirms species status
There are always little "treasures" to be found in museum collections – that's what makes them so valuable for research. Scientists from the Natural History Museum Vienna, Austria, and the LOEWE Centre for Translational Biodiversity Genomics (TBG) in Hesse, Germany, have now analysed the genetic data of a rare and presumably already extinct species of torpedo ray. It was collected, preserved, and described during the second Austro-Hungarian deep-sea expedition in the Red Sea between 1897 and 1898 – but has never been observed again since. The new results confirm that the torpedo ray Torpedo suessii is a separate species within the genus.
There are always little "treasures" to be found in museum collections – that's what makes them so valuable for research. With today's methods of analysis, new, detailed findings can be elicited from archives that are often centuries old. Scientists from the Natural History Museum Vienna, Austria, and the LOEWE Centre for Translational Biodiversity Genomics (TBG) in Hesse, Germany, have now analysed the genetic data of a rare and presumably already extinct species of torpedo ray. It was collected, preserved, and described during the second Austro-Hungarian deep-sea expedition in the Red Sea between 1897 and 1898 – but has never been observed again since. The new results confirm that the torpedo ray Torpedo suessii is a separate species within the genus.
Torpedo rays are known to be able to paralyse their prey using an electric organ made of converted muscles. Their electric shock has even caused divers to lose consciousness. Otherwise, they are sluggish fish that swim slowly or bury themselves in the sand or mud of the seabed. The eleven known species are found in temperate and tropical seas and vary in shape, colour, and size between 15 and 180 centimetres.
The now genomically analysed Torpedo suessii, named after the Austrian geologist and pioneer of the Vienna High Spring Water Pipeline Eduard Suess (1831-1914), is a very rare species. It was first described by the Viennese ichthyologist and curator of the fish collection at the Natural History Museum Vienna Franz Steindachner (1834-1919) after an expedition to the Red Sea – including Yemen – which he led scientifically. The research trips on the SMS Pola organised by the Austrian Academy of Sciences at the end of the 19th century were aimed, among other things, at the zoological exploration of various bodies of water, including the eastern Mediterranean and the Adriatic.
"This specimen is a real rarity for us, as only the three historical specimens of the species Torpedo suessii in our collection are known. Since its discovery, the fish species has never been sighted again by scientists – despite its striking skin pattern, which is reminiscent of the spots of a giraffe with up to eight large dark brown spots with lighter outlines on a light brown background," reports Associate Professor Dr Anja Palandačić, Collection Manager of the Fish Collection at the NHM Vienna. "We therefore assume that Torpedo suessii is extinct. The results of our genome analysis confirm that it should be regarded as a separate species within the torpedo ray family," continues Palandačić. She is the first author of the study published in the journal "Zoologica Scripta". The study was carried out in cooperation with the Natural History Museum Vienna and its Central Research Laboratories as well as with experts from the LOEWE Centre for Translational Biodiversity Genomics (TBG) at the Senckenberg Society for Nature Research in Frankfurt am Main, where the genomic basis of biodiversity is being researched using a wide variety of organisms.
"In view of the increasing threat to marine ecosystems and the fish communities living in them due to climate change and pollution, it is crucial to take stock of marine biodiversity in order to protect it. With our genome analyses and the resulting information on species, we want to gain a better understanding of biodiversity on Earth and thus contribute to its conservation," says Dr Carola Greve, Head of Laboratory at the LOEWE Centre TBG. "Of course, rare species or unique samples such as those of the Torpedo suessii from museum collections are particularly valuable for our analyses and subsequent species comparisons. Analysing samples that were collected more than a hundred years ago and have been kept in the collections ever since requires great care during laboratory work and is a special event – especially when a species can also be genomically identified," summarises Greve.
Wissenschaftlicher Ansprechpartner:
Dr Anja Palandačić
Collection Management Fish Collection
Natural History Museum Vienna
Tel. +43 (0)1 52 177 212
anja.palandacic@nhm-wien.ac.at
Dr Carola Greve
Head of Laboratory
LOEWE Centre for Translational Biodiversity Genomics (TBG)
Senckenberg Society for Nature Research
Phone +49 (0)69 7542-1844
carola.greve@senckenberg.de
Originalpublikation:
Publication in Zoologica Scripta:
Anja Palandačić, Martin Kapun, Carola Greve, Tilman Schell, Sandra Kirchner, Luise Kruckenhauser, Nikolaus Szucsich, Nina Bogutskaya
"From historical expedition diaries to whole genome sequencing: A case study of the likely extinct Red Sea torpedo ray"
https://doi.org/10.1111/zsc.12632