The American burying beetle, Nicrophorus americanus (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae), is the largest burying beetle in North America. The American burying beetle (ABB) has lost nearly 90% of its original habitat range and now only resides in three populations (Rhode Island, Nebraska extending into South Dakota, and Oklahoma extending into Kansas and Arkansas). ABB was listed as endangered in 1989 but, in 2020, was reclassified as threatened. These beetles are important decomposers, and as the largest species in their subfamily, are able handle larger vertebrate carcasses than other related species. ABB are also unique in the fact that they practice biparental care, which is not found in many other species.

Today, we generate the chromosome-length genome assembly for the American burying beetle, see https://www.dnazoo.org/assemblies/nicrophorus_americanus. The HiFi draft for this work was generated by Samantha Hittson, Manpreet Kohli, Ethan Tolman, Paul Frandsen, Jessica Ware, and W. Wyatt Hoback, which was upgraded using Hi-C data generated by the DNA Zoo Consortium. Funding for the draft was from Ware Lab start-up funding from American Museum of Natural History. Funding was also provided by grant # 0259007642 to WW Hoback from the U.S. Army, with additional support from Hatch Project accession No. 1019561 from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture. Work was conducted under permit # # TE045150-3 held by Hoback.
Explore the interactive Hi-C contact map for ABB below, and visit the assembly page for more details.