Silica-gel dried. For new field-collections of bryophytes, we advise collecting living plants into plastic bags, and bringing samples back to the lab for further preparation. Although it is apparent that vascular plant DNA quality declines rapidly after harvesting leaves or stems into bags, the entire bryophyte plant is usually collected, and in most cases survives inside a zip-lock bag for a week or more (although more rapid processing is recommended whenever possible).
Processing of the specimen is done using a dissecting microscope, as soon as possible after collection. Minute fragments of other plants, grit, soil and insects can be removed at this point with forceps and water. Diatoms and other microorganisms can often be seen on bryophyte leaf or thallus surfaces; some labs use protocols that involve cleaning the sample further with sonication (to dislodge particles) or with bleach – however both techniques can rapidly strip the colour out of these plants and so can be presumed harmful. Algae and other contaminants should not be amplified with direct PCR for commonly used plant barcoding loci, which are land-plant or bryophyte specific. With complex thalloid liverworts, the scales and rhizoids on the thallus underside often trap organic matter that may also contain PCR inhibitors, as well as small plant fragments; scales and rhizoids can be stripped off with a razor blade or forceps. Once the bryophyte has been physically cleaned for DNA extraction, it should be put straight into silica gel to dry.
The silica-gel dried plant material can either be stored long-term in ziplock bags containing silica gel, preferably in the dark to avoid light-bleaching and associated DNA degradation, or the dry tissue can be removed from the silica and placed in low-humidity cabinets for long-term storage. Due to the small size and fragility of bryophyte tissue, valuable collections can be housed in small tight-sealing petri dishes (e.g. Gelman sterile Petri Dishes 50x11) within the low humidity cabinets, rather than in paper envelopes or ziplock bags in which the material may be crushed and lost.