Elsa Call

Elsa Call
Lund University | LU · Department of Biology

PhD in Biology - Lund University

About

5
Publications
4,146
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89
Citations
Introduction
I started as a Doctoral student in the Biodiversity Lab in November 2015 under the supervision of Niklas Wahlberg and Mikael Hedrén. I am involved in different projects as investigating the level of DNA degradation in museum specimens of various ages, exploring different possibilities for sequencing DNA from museum samples and finally phylogenetics studies on particular clades of Lepidoptera.
Additional affiliations
November 2015 - May 2020
Lund University
Position
  • PhD Student
Education
November 2015 - May 2020
Lund University
Field of study
  • Biology
September 2013 - June 2014
University of Rennes
Field of study
  • Functional, Behavioural and Evolutionary Ecology
September 2011 - June 2012
Université de Montpellier
Field of study
  • Biology, Ecology, Evolution

Publications

Publications (5)
Preprint
Full-text available
There are various possibilities for sequencing highly degraded DNA, such as target enrichment (TE), or whole-genome sequencing (WGS). Here we compare TE and WGS methods using old museum specimens of two families of moths in the superfamily Geometroidea: Epicopeiidae and Sematuridae. Until recently, the relationships of these two families were uncle...
Article
Full-text available
Billions of specimens can be found in natural history museum collections around the world, holding potential molecular secrets to be unveiled. Among them are intriguing specimens of rare families of moths that, while represented in morphology-based works, are only beginning to be included in genomic studies: Pseudobistonidae, Sematuridae, and Epico...
Article
Full-text available
Museum collections around the world contain billions of specimens, including rare and extinct species. If their genetic information could be retrieved at a large scale, this would dramatically increase our knowledge of genetic and taxonomic diversity information, and support evolutionary, ecological and systematic studies. We here present a target...
Thesis
Full-text available
In the age of museomics, the ability to sequence the genetic material from old museum specimens provides an invaluable and often untapped molecular resource. The application of the latest Next-Generation sequencing (NGS) technologies to such specimens allows us to utilise the diverse biobank that is natural history museums. These approaches provide...
Article
Asexual reproduction occurs widely in plants and animals, particularly in insects. Aphid species usually reproduce by cyclic parthenogenesis, but many species include obligate asexual lineages. We recently showed that the leaf-curl plum aphid, Brachycaudus helichrysi, actually encompasses two lineages, B. helichrysi H1 and H2. Ecological data sugge...

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