Optimized imaging methods for species-level identification of food-contaminating beetles

Abstract Identifying the exact species of pantry beetle responsible for food contamination, is imperative in assessing the risks associated with contamination scenarios. Each beetle species is known to have unique patterns on their hardened forewings (known as elytra) through which they can be ident...

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Autores principales: Tanmay Bera, Leihong Wu, Hongjian Ding, Howard Semey, Amy Barnes, Zhichao Liu, Himansu Vyas, Weida Tong, Joshua Xu
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Nature Portfolio 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/9cbdaa038c854abbb39ea8b2d75dbd5f
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Sumario:Abstract Identifying the exact species of pantry beetle responsible for food contamination, is imperative in assessing the risks associated with contamination scenarios. Each beetle species is known to have unique patterns on their hardened forewings (known as elytra) through which they can be identified. Currently, this is done through manual microanalysis of the insect or their fragments in contaminated food samples. We envision that the use of automated pattern analysis would expedite and scale up the identification process. However, such automation would require images to be captured in a consistent manner, thereby enabling the creation of large repositories of high-quality images. Presently, there is no standard imaging technique for capturing images of beetle elytra, which consequently means, there is no standard method of beetle species identification through elytral pattern analysis. This deficiency inspired us to optimize and standardize imaging methods, especially for food-contaminating beetles. For this endeavor, we chose multiple species of beetles belonging to different families or genera that have near-identical elytral patterns, and thus are difficult to identify correctly at the species level. Our optimized imaging method provides enhanced images such that the elytral patterns between individual species could easily be distinguished from each other, through visual observation. We believe such standardization is critical in developing automated species identification of pantry beetles and/or other insects. This eventually may lead to improved taxonomical classification, allowing for better management of food contamination and ecological conservation.