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2006 All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory (ATBI) Grant Awards

$69,439 in Awards Presented to ATBI Researchers

Grant money supplied to Discover Life in America by the Great Smoky Mountains Association and Friends of Great Smoky Mountains National Park is supporting All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory research in the Park for the 2006 season. Dr. John Morse, Discover Life in America Board member and Science Committee Co-Chair, administers the grant program, now in its seventh year. The review panel included eight DLIA scientists. Requests totaled $90,480 for the $75,000 budgeted for this year. Links to the grant summaries are below.

Eighteen proposals were funded out of a total of 22 submitted. The research will delve into a variety of life forms in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Some of the proposals are continuations of previous and on-going work. All are coordinated with the Discover Life in America Science Plan.

The grant season is from April 1st though March 1st.

In the photo below, red ants surround a Little Brown Jug along the Old Settlers Trail. See grant number 15 for more on ant diverstiy in GSMNP.

Little Brown Jug along the Old Settlers Trail.

Click photo to enlarge.
Photo by Charles Wilder.

Recipients of the grants will present a report of results to date at the December, 2006 annual meeting of the ATBI, with a final report and geo-referenced data by March 1, 2007 . They will send voucher specimens to the Park and other authorized collections. Individuals and organizations interested in assisting with the funding of future ATBI research please contact Steve Bohleber, steve@bohleberlaw.com, DLIA Board member and chair of the Development Committee.

Grant #
DLIA2006-
Principal Investigator Grant Proposal Title (click on title to learn more)
01 Paul J. Bartels Tardigrade Inventory 2006-2007
02 Steven L. Stephenson Myxo Blitz 2006
03 Richard Baird Microfungi of the American Beech and Fraser Fir Forests in GSMNP: Litter Studies
04 Larissa N. Vasilyeva Pyrenomycetes in the GSMNP and their biogeographic relationships with East Asian relatives
05 Charles L. Staines Web Page Development for Five Families of Beetles (Insecta: Coleoptera) in GSMNP
06 Matt E. Dakin Survey of the Orthoptera and Related Orders
08 Ian M. Smith Extending Our Knowledge of the Diversity of Water Mites (Acari-Hydrachnidiae)
10 Gary J. Steck Tephritid Flies of GSMNP
11 Adriean J. Mayor Karst Quest 2006
14 Tor Tønsberg Discover Lichens in the GSMNP 2006
15 Nathan J. Sanders Ant Diversity in GSMNP, Part III
16 Patrick L. Rakes Snorkel Surveys to target potentially undiscovered fish populations in GSMNP
DLIA 2006-17 Mark J. Wetzel An Inventory of Freshwater Oligochaeta (Annelida) at Selected Sites in GSMNP
18 Cynthia Roxanne Rutledge Connelly Seasonal Occurrence and Habitat Utilization of Exotic, Invasive Mosquitoes in the GSMNP
19 Kathie T. Hodge The first Entomophthorales Expedition: Insect-pathogenic fungi of GSMNP
21 Sead Sabanadzovic Investigation of fern viruses in GSMNP
22 Brian Scholtens GSMNP Lepidoptera Survey: Late Season Barcoding

 

TITLE of Project: Tardigrade Inventory 2006-2007
GRANT # DLIA2006- 01
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Paul J. Bartels
PI DEPARTMENT: Environmental Studies Department
Department of Biology
PI ORGANIZATION: Warren Wilson College
POSTAL ADDRESS: CPO 6032
PO Box 9000
Asheville, NC 28730
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: pbartels@warren-wilson.edu
PI TELEPHONE: 828-771-3069
PI FAX: 828-299-4841
GRANT AMOUNT: $5,000
PROJECT SUMMARY:

We propose to continue our inventory of water bears (Phylum Tardigrada). To date (Jan ‘06) we have identified over 8,000 specimens, discovering 66 new records for the park (out of a total of 69 species), including 13 species new to science. This is the second largest inventory of tardigrades ever completed, and the first to create a computer, georeferenced database. Species richness estimates suggest that a total of 96 species exist in the park. For comparison, this is about 10% of the world’s known tardigrades, while the park holds only about 6% of the world’s salamanders. The Tenth International Symposium on Tardigrades will be meeting the summer of 2006. Three to four presentations will be presented at that conference and submitted for publication.

 

TITLE of Project: Myxo Blitz 2006
GRANT # DLIA2006- 02
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Dr. Steven L. Stephenson
PI DEPARTMENT: Department of Biological Sciences
PI ORGANIZATION: University of Arkansas
POSTAL ADDRESS: SCEN 626
Fayetteville, AR 72701
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: slsteph@uark.edu
PI TELEPHONE: 479-575-2869
PI FAX: 479-575-4010
GRANT AMOUNT: $2,000
PROJECT SUMMARY:

The funds requested in this proposal will be used to support two activities. The first will be an intensive collecting/educational event (“Myxo Blitz 2006”) already scheduled for the weekend of July 15-16, 2006. This event, to be based at Purchase Knob, will bring together a group of researchers, educators, students and volunteers who will spend two days carrying out field surveys for myxomycetes in a number of localities on the south side of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. This portion of the Park has been understudied in previous efforts to document the distribution and occurrence of these organisms. The second activity will be the development of a series of species pages (to be posted on the DLIA web site) for many of the common myxomycetes known to occur in the Park.

 

TITLE of Project: Microfungi of American Beech and Fraser Fir forests in Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP): LITTER STUDIES
GRANT # DLIA2006- 03
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Richard E. Baird
PI DEPARTMENT: Entomology and Plant Pathology Dept.
PI ORGANIZATION: Mississippi State University
POSTAL ADDRESS: Box 9655, 206 Dorman Hall, Stone Blvd.
Mississippi State University
Mississippi State, MS 39762
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: rbaird@plantpath.msstate.edu
PI TELEPHONE: (662) 325-9661
PI FAX: (662) 325-8955
GRANT AMOUNT: $5,000
PROJECT SUMMARY:

Objective: Catalog the microfungi present on litter tissues of American beech, Fraser fir, and Eastern hemlock (healthy and infested) of the GSMNP. These tree habitats were selected for study due to the critical need to develop baseline data from healthy and damaged stands being devastated by exotic insect/disease pests.

Methods: A total of 5 locations (stands) for each tree species will be visited during each sampling period. Each tree within the a site location will be mapped using GPS and revisited for further survey. All locations will be sampled on April 31, June 15 and August 31. Within each sample location, 10 replicate trees will be randomly selected ( ³10 m between each replicate). From each replicate tree per sampling site, one litter sample will be taken per replicate tree and a 4 m 2 area will be selected using 90 ° (April 31), 180 ° (June 15) and 270 ° (August 31) compass reading extending 3 m beyond the tree base. All sample processing, fungal identification, and storage of the litter segments will follow the procedures developed by Rossman et al. (1998). Bark sample processing and microflora identification will follow the procedures used by Baird (1991). An except, is that Sabouraud dextrose agar with yeast extract (SDAY) medium will be used in place of potato dextrose agar medium (PDA).

Samples will be transported under ice and processed at Mississippi State University. Fungi will be identified, placed into -80°C freezer, mycological herbarium, Mississippi State University. Any fungal collections that cannot be determined by the PI will be split and a portion sent to a known expert of the group for confirmation or identification. All data will be submitted following the guidelines established by Discover Life in America as shown in http//www.dlia.org/atbi/science/guidelines_submit.shtml.

 

TITLE of Project: “Pyrenomycetes in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and their biogeographic relationships with East Asian relatives”
GRANT # DLIA2006- 04
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Dr. Larissa N. Vasilyeva
PI DEPARTMENT: Botany
PI ORGANIZATION: Institute of Biology and Soil Science, Far East Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences
POSTAL ADDRESS: Prospekt Stoletiya 159
Kirova Street 29-60
Vladivostok, Primorsky Territory 690022
Russia
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: vasilyeva@ibss.dvo.ru
PI TELEPHONE: 007 (4232) 310462
PI FAX: 007 (4232) 310193
GRANT AMOUNT: $2,500
PROJECT SUMMARY:

Pyrenomycetous fungi are morphologically and biologically diverse and occur in virtually all ecosystems, where they are important as decomposers. Their anamorphs (asexual states) include many industrially beneficial fungi as well as agents of some of the most devastating plant and animal diseases. A number of species are restricted to eastern North America, where remnants of the ancient Tertiary flora persisted, or also occur where similar fragments of this flora are found in eastern Asia. Such a distribution (referred to as the famous “Asa Gray disjunction”) has not been studied previously in pyrenomycetes. The focus on the proposed project is on continuing my efforts to document the species of pyrenomycetes that occur in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Specimens collected in the Park will be compared with those already known from eastern Asia to assess the taxonomic and biogeographical relationships of the species involved.

 

TITLE of Project: Web Page Development for Five Families of Beetles (Insecta: Coleoptera) in GSMNP
GRANT # DLIA2006- 05
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Charles L. Staines
PI DEPARTMENT: NA
PI ORGANIZATION: NA
POSTAL ADDRESS: 3302 Decker Place
Edgewater, Maryland 21037
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: stainesc@si.edu
PI TELEPHONE: 410-956-2174
PI FAX: NA
GRANT AMOUNT: $5,000
PROJECT SUMMARY:

The funding requested by this proposal will provide partial support web page development for five families of aquatic Coleoptera (beetles) to contribute to the overall goals of the Great Smoky Mountain National Park, All Taxon Biodiversity Inventory (GSMNP, ATBI). Funding will support writing web page text, photographing, and developing educational material for 89 species of GSMNP Coleoptera.

 

TITLE of Project: Survey of the Orthoptera and Related Orders
GRANT # DLIA2006- 06
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Matt E. Dakin
PI DEPARTMENT: NA
PI ORGANIZATION: NA
POSTAL ADDRESS: 2011 North Hills Dr.
Opelika AL 36801
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: patdakin@mindspring.com
PI TELEPHONE: (334) 742-0849
PI FAX: NA
GRANT AMOUNT: $4,125
PROJECT SUMMARY:

We will collect specimens of the grasshoppers, katydids, crickets, cockroaches, stick insects and mantids in as many locations as possible in the Park. A variety of collecting techniques will be used including daylight search and capture, headlighting at night, and possibly light traps and baits.

Results will be presented at the Annual Conference of Discover Life in America and published on the DLIA web site. All specimens will be deposited in the Park Collection.

 

TITLE of Project: Extending Our Knowledge of the Diversity of Water Mites (Acari-Hydrachnidiae)
GRANT # DLIA2006- 8
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Ian M. Smith
PI DEPARTMENT: Biodiversity
PI ORGANIZATION: Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
POSTAL ADDRESS: KW Neatby Building, 960 Carling Avenue
Ottawa ON K1A 0C6
Canada
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: smithi@agr.gc.ca
PI TELEPHONE: 613 759-1783
PI FAX: 613 759-1927
CO-INVESTIGATOR: Andrea J. Radwell
DEPARTMENT: Department of Biological Sciences
ORGANIZATION: University of Arkansas
POSTAL ADDRESS: 26 Emporia Street
Eureka Springs, AR 72632
ELECTRONIC MAIL: radwell@razorbackroad.com
TELEPHONE: 479-253-2883
FAX: 479-575-4010
GRANT AMOUNT: $4,569
PROJECT SUMMARY:

We conducted an initial survey of water mite diversity in Great Smoky Mountain National Park in September 2005 by obtaining 56 collections from 11 watersheds representing stream riffles and pools, springs and seepages, and waterfalls. As anticipated, water mites proved to be abundant and their populations taxonomically diverse in these habitats. We identified mites from 49 genera in 25 families and 7 superfamilies, including two genera not previously found in North America and two others known only from Oregon and California. Species identification is underway and we expect to find at least 150 species, about half of them undescribed. Our objectives for 2006 are to continue identifying specimens collected in 2005 in northern and western areas of the Park, and to survey selected habitats in southern and eastern watersheds. We will also conduct an educational workshop to provide a comprehensive introduction and some hands-on experience to those wishing to improve their knowledge of water mites.

 

TITLE of Project: Species Diversity and Community Composition of Carabid Beetles in Great Smoky Mountains National Park
GRANT # DLIA2006- 9
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Dr. Robert A. Browne
PI DEPARTMENT: Biology
PI ORGANIZATION: Wake Forest University
POSTAL ADDRESS: Box 7325
Winston-Salem, NC 27109
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: brownera@wfu.edu
PI TELEPHONE: 336-758-5569
PI FAX: 336-758-6008
GRANT AMOUNT: $5,000
PROJECT SUMMARY:

We propose to sample carabid (ground) beetles along three altitudinal gradients in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP), with sampling occurring at 300 m altitudinal increments. Four additional spruce-fir sites in GSMNP will also be sampled. Sampling will be conducted from March 1 – December 1, 2006 and will involve pitfall traps and hand collections. Data will be integrated with studies initiated in 2003. This approach will provide data for a) species inventories for each site, including previously undescribed species and species new to GSMNP b) seasonal and annual variation of the carabid communities, c) estimates of the efficiency of each technique for sampling carabid beetle communities d), to test a number of hypotheses regarding species occurrence and stability.

 

TITLE of Project: Tephritid flies of GSMNP
GRANT # DLIA2006- 10
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Dr. Gary J. Steck
PI DEPARTMENT: Florida State Collection of Arthropods
PI ORGANIZATION: Florida Dept Agriculture & Consumer Services, Division of Plant Industry
POSTAL ADDRESS: 1911 SW 34th Street
Gainesville, FL 32614-7100
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: steckg@doacs.state.fl.us
PI TELEPHONE: 352-372-3502 x 188
PI FAX: 352-334-0737
CO-INVESTIGATOR: Mr. Bruce D. Sutton
DEPARTMENT: Florida State Collection of Arthropods
ORGANIZATION: Florida Dept Agriculture & Consumer Services, Division of Plant Industry
POSTAL ADDRESS: 1911 SW 34th Street
Gainesville, FL 32614-7100
ELECTRONIC MAIL: suttonb@doacs.state.fl.us
TELEPHONE: 352-372-3502 x 159
FAX: 352-334-0737
GRANT AMOUNT: $3,000
PROJECT SUMMARY:

The true fruit flies are colorful insects whose immature stages are obligate plant feeders. GSMNP, with an estimated 60-70 species of fruit flies, is a hot spot of tephritid diversity, as it harbors over half of the fruit fly species known from all of eastern North America. We will document their biologies, distributions, host relationships, and immature stages. Methods include mass-trapping, targeted collecting, and dissection of infested plants to reveal details of feeding, development time, mortality factors, parasites and predators. Species pages, distribution maps, and photos of flies and hosts will be posted on the Web.

 

TITLE of Project: Karst Quest, 2006
GRANT # DLIA2006- 11
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Dr. Adriean J. Mayor
PI DEPARTMENT: Natural History Collections
PI ORGANIZATION: Great Smoky Mountains National Park
POSTAL ADDRESS: 107 Park Headquarters Rd.
Gatlinburg, TN 37738
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: Adriean_Mayor@nps.gov
PI TELEPHONE: 865-436-1295
PI FAX: NA
GRANT AMOUNT: $3,500
PROJECT SUMMARY:

The purpose of this bioquest, to be held July 27-30, 2006 , is to conduct a biodiversity inventory of a variety of taxonomic groups whose habitat includes the limestone areas of Great Smoky Mountains National Park . We plan to bring together experts in the following groups: land snails, leaf litter and soil organisms, tardigrades, beetles, vascular plants, bryophytes, lichens, fungi, and slime molds. Investigations will take place around the entrances to caves and sinkholes and in the plant communities derived from carbonate rock. There are at least seven areas in the Smokies that can be considered karst-like habitat and are very distinctive from the rest of the Park. Protected areas for rare and endangered species will be off limits or highly restricted, according to Park recommendations. Researchers may explore caverns and examine some cave organisms, depending upon Park policy and the interest and the availability of expert cavers (hazardous nature of the vertical caves). A broad array of involvement is needed from various taxonomic experts and a variety of collecting methods will be employed. Ten researchers have already indicated they will participate, and Discover Life in America volunteers will be recruited and trained. Educational programs will be presented to Park visitors, as well as to teachers and students, through cooperation with the education partners of Discover Life in America .

Funding will support travel and lodging for taxonomists and cave biology experts to come to Great smoky Mountains National Park .

 

TITLE of Project: Discover lichens in Great Smoky Mountains National Park in 2006
GRANT # DLIA2006- 14
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Prof. Tor Tønsberg
PI DEPARTMENT: Museum of Botany
PI ORGANIZATION: University of Bergen
POSTAL ADDRESS: Allégt. 41, P.O. Box 7800
N-5020 BERGEN, NORWAY
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: tor.tonsberg@bot.uib.no
PI TELEPHONE: +47 55 58 3333
PI FAX: +47 55 58 9667
GRANT AMOUNT: $3,190
PROJECT SUMMARY:

The GSMNP is extremely rich in lichens. I will continue my previous work aiming at finding so many bark and rock lichens as possible that are new to science or at least new to the park. I will focus on sterile, crustose species on tree bark and on rock overhangs. Good material from several localities is needed to make good descriptions of lichens that are new to science. It is necessary to carry out field work in as many habitats as possible in all parts of the park to learn about the variation and ecology of the species. The dust lichens (Lepraria) have a diversity center in the park. They can easily be seen on bark and rock surfaces from trails throughout the park. Several of them have no name, i.e., they are not yet described. A key will be made for sterile bark lichens.

 

TITLE of Project: Snorkel surveys to target potentially undiscovered fish populations in GSMNP
GRANT # DLIA2006- 16
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Mr. Patrick L.
PI DEPARTMENT: NA
PI ORGANIZATION: Conservation Fisheries, Inc.
POSTAL ADDRESS: 3424 Division Street
Knoxville, TN 37919
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: xenisma@aol.com
PI TELEPHONE: 865-521-6665
PI FAX: 865-521-6665
GRANT AMOUNT: $5,000
PROJECT SUMMARY:

Recent surveys (Rakes and Shute 2005) and taxonomic revisions have increased the number of fish taxa known from GSMNP to 88 species. These surveys discovered several previously unknown fish populations in poorly accessible or never sampled stream systems; in addition, a number of historic occurrences were not verified. The findings suggested the need for additional surveys, both in streams that might be predicted to harbor undiscovered populations, as well as in some of the surveyed streams where historically occurring species were not observed. An additional goal would be underwater digital photography and/or videography to capture images of the Park’s fishes for web sites and other educational outreach.

 

TITLE of Project: Ant Diversity in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Part III
GRANT # DLIA2006- 15
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Dr. Nathan Sanders
PI DEPARTMENT: Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
PI ORGANIZATION: University of Tennessee
POSTAL ADDRESS: 569 Dabney Hall
Knoxville, TN 37919
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: nsanders@utk.edu
PI TELEPHONE: 865-974-5231
PI FAX: NA
GRANT AMOUNT: $4,410
PROJECT SUMMARY:

Our research group has spent two very successful summers collecting leaf litter ants in deciduous forests of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. We have also processed all of the samples from Chuck Parker’s “pilot ATBI study.” Here, we propose to initiate a sampling regime for leaf litter ants in a variety of other ecosystems, focusing on high elevation sites, and continuing to sample at three apparently high diversity sites (Twin Creeks, Tremont, and in the Nolan Creek watershed).

 

TITLE of Project: To continue an inventory of freshwater Oligochaeta (Annelida) at selected sites in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park
GRANT # DLIA2006- 17
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Mark J. Wetzel
PI DEPARTMENT: NA
PI ORGANIZATION: Illinois Natural History Survey, Center for Biodiversity
POSTAL ADDRESS: 1816 South Oak Street
1021 I-Building, MC-652
Champaign, IL 61820-6953
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: mjwetzel@uiuc.edu
PI TELEPHONE: 217-244-2108
PI FAX: 217-244-0729
GRANT AMOUNT: $4,991
PROJECT SUMMARY:

Freshwater oligochaetes (segmented worms – Phylum Annelida) are widely distributed throughout North America, yet specimens often remain unidentified because of poor collecting techniques, limited taxonomic expertise, and lack of mature specimens. Many publications have focused on the distribution, ecology, and taxonomy of oligochaetes elsewhere in North America, yet none has addressed their biodiversity in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Of the 238 species of freshwater oligochaetes occurring in North America, over 120 occur in the southeastern U.S. Previous DLIA mini-grants have supported our surveys in the Park; research progress (site information, methodologies, list of species, literature, alignment with the ATBI Science Plan) is summarized on our project website < http://www.inhs.uiuc.edu/~mjwetzel/AOGSMNP.home.html >. Funding in 2006 will support one collecting trip to the Park in August to revisit selected sites, obtain mature individuals of taxa collected previously as immatures, and finish the processing of back-logged samples.

 

TITLE of Project: Seasonal occurrence and habitat utilization of exotic, invasive mosquitoes in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park
GRANT # DLIA2006- 18
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Dr. Cynthia Roxanne (Rutledge) Connelly
PI DEPARTMENT: Entomology and Nematology
PI ORGANIZATION: University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences
POSTAL ADDRESS: Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory
200 9th Street SE
Vero Beach, FL 32962
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: crr@ufl.edu
PI TELEPHONE: 772-778-7200 x. 172
PI FAX: 772-778-7205
GRANT AMOUNT: $5,000
PROJECT SUMMARY:

We will train volunteers to monitor the Park for mosquitoes living in water-holding containers associated with human activity (tires, cans, bowls, bottles, buckets). This program will provide data on the times of year when the mosquitoes are most abundant and how the different species utilize various containers. The results may provide some insight into potential public heath concerns. A website for the public will be developed to display photographs and natural history of each mosquito species collected from the Park.

 

TITLE of Project: The first Entomophthorales Expedition: Insect-pathogenic fungi of the Great Smokies
GRANT # DLIA2006- 19
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Dr. Kathie T. Hodge
PI DEPARTMENT: Plant Pathology
PI ORGANIZATION: Cornell University
POSTAL ADDRESS: 334 Plant Science Bldg.
Ithaca, NY 14853
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: kh11@cornell.edu
PI TELEPHONE: 607-255-5356
PI FAX: 607-254-6448
GRANT AMOUNT: $2,212
PROJECT SUMMARY:

Fungi that belong to the unusual order Entomophthorales are mostly pathogens of insects. They play important roles regulating natural insect populations, and some are important biological controls of pest insects. A team of four Cornell researchers plus DLIA volunteers will conduct a four-day preliminary inventory of the Entomophthorales in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in 2006. Collections gathered during this expedition will be the first from the GSMNP, and will form an important core for understanding the biodiversity of this interesting group in North America. Volunteers will have the opportunity to learn about an often-overlooked but bizarrely beautiful and interesting group of organisms.

 

TITLE of Project: Investigation on fern viruses in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park
GRANT # DLIA2006- 21
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Dr. Sead Sabanadzovic
PI DEPARTMENT: Entomology and Plant Pathology
PI ORGANIZATION: Mississippi State University
POSTAL ADDRESS: Mail Stop 9775
Mississippi State, Mississippi 39762
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: ss501@msstate.edu
PI TELEPHONE: 662-325-9322
PI FAX: 662-325-8837
CO-INVESTIGATOR: Dr. Rodrigo Valverde
DEPARTMENT: Plant Pathology and Crop Physiology
ORGANIZATION: Louisiana State University
POSTAL ADDRESS: 302 Life Science Building
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803
ELECTRONIC MAIL: ravalve@lsu.edu
TELEPHONE: 225-578-1384
FAX: 225-578-1415
GRANT AMOUNT: $5,000
PROJECT SUMMARY:

No data on fern viruses is available in scientific literature. Plenty of native species/varieties present in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park represent an excellent substrate for initiating an organized study on fern viruses.

The project proposes molecular investigation on viruses infecting fern species/varieties present in the GSMNP and will represent pioneer work in this subject worldwide. Study on fern viruses will generate some valuable scientific data and will give insights about the evolutionary relationships of plant and fern viruses.

This project proposes very first study on viruses within the DLIA/ATBI activities and will contribute to enrich All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory (ATBI) of the GSMNP.

A “side-effect” of the project will be identification of “virus-free” fern samples that may be used for species/variety conservation.

 

TITLE of Project: Great Smoky Mountains Lepidoptera Survey: Late Season Barcoding
GRANT # DLIA2006- 22
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR (PI): Dr. Brian Scholtens
PI DEPARTMENT: Biology Dept
PI ORGANIZATION: College of Charleston
POSTAL ADDRESS: 58 Coming St., Rm. 214
Charleston, SC 29401
PI ELECTRONIC MAIL: scholtensb@cofc.edu
PI TELEPHONE: (843) 953-8081
PI FAX: (843) 953-5453
GRANT AMOUNT: $4,000
PROJECT SUMMARY:

The Lepidoptera TWIG of the Great Smoky Mountains ATBI has successfully used the bioblitz format to construct an increasingly more comprehensive list of species for the park (approaching 1700 spp.). During 2004 and 2005 we started partnering with Dr. Paul Hebert of the University of Guelph to barcode all species from the park. This effort has resulted in over 1000 species being sampled for DNA barcodes and another 300-400 having cryopreserved specimens deposited at the Ambrose Monell Tissue Collection at the American Museum of Natural History ( New York).

Great Smoky Mountains National Park and DLIA has taken the lead in barcoding Lepidoptera in North America. This effort will have far reaching impacts on ecological and systematic studies. Already many species in eastern North America can be identified at any lifestage because of barcoding over the last two years (currently about 2/3 of the known species in the park). This could be invaluable in monitoring efforts, particularly in evaluating the effect of introduced parasitoids on non-target species. Barcoding has also revealed cases of potential cryptic species within the Smokies fauna, particularly in species that are distributed over a large geographic area. The same phenomenon has been noted in the Costa Rican fauna, also first indicated by barcoding efforts (Hajibabaei et al. 2006, Hebert et al. 2004).

Our survey efforts have resulted in a large database of over 21,000 records, near all georeferenced. All records have been submitted to DLIA and the park for inclusion in the master database. We hope to have this on-line in the near future to facilitate creating distribution maps and correlating species with specialize habitats.

Data from the Lepidoptera survey has been published in several papers (Wagner 2005, Pogue 2005, in press) with additional publications in various stages of completion. These include papers on the use of bioblitzes in survey efforts, a list of Lepidoptera known from the park, and species descriptions (e.g. new Ligdia sp.).

Up to this point we have conducted major collecting efforts (3 large bioblitzes and 2 smaller efforts) in May, June and July, but have not been able to schedule later season trips (except individual efforts). We propose a mid-August blitz modeled after the 2005 effort. This effort was an open-ended, five-day collecting trip with the goal of improving our coverage of barcoded species. This trip was very successful, with about 400 species and 1000 individuals barcoded. Even with our intense earlier efforts, we still recorded several new records for the park, particularly in groups with small moths. Because we have not sampled intensely during the later season, we anticipate that an August effort will result in additional new records, as well as significantly adding to the barcoding coverage for the park. Our ultimate goal is to have all known park species barcoded so that information is retrievable in any lifestage.

As in past blitzes, the main expense to successfully complete the project will be travel for participants. We propose to fund travel for a team from Dr. Hebert’s lab to coordinate DNA sample collection and imaging of specimens. We will again invite staff from the AMNH to do cryopreservation of specimens. In addition, we will invite taxonomic experts to process and identify samples and encourage graduate and undergraduate student participation. A complete voucher set of all species taken at the blitz will be preserved and barcoded. As in the past, many participants will provide their own travel funds, and most scientists will fund an assistant for the effort. Both the Hebert lab and the AMNH have funded a portion of their expenses in past blitzes, and will likely be able to do the same during 2006. The amounts indicated for these groups reflect these contributions.