Estuarine molecular bycatch as a landscape-wide biomonitoring tool
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24475Date
2021-08-13Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Mariani, Stefano; Harper, Linsey R.; Collins, Rupert A.; Baillie, Charles; Wangensteen, Owen S.; McDevitt, Allan D.; Heddell-Cowie, Morton; Genner, Martin J.Abstract
Environmental DNA analysis is rapidly transforming biodiversity monitoring and bolstering conservation applications worldwide. This approach has been assisted by the development of metabarcoding PCR primers that are suited for detection of a wide range of taxa. However, little effort has gone into exploring the value of the non-target DNA sequences that are generated in every survey, but subsequently discarded. Here we demonstrate that fish-targeted markers widely employed in aquatic biomonitoring can also detect birds and mammals present in the surrounding habitats. We showcase this feature in three temperate estuaries over multiple seasons, where dozens of bird and mammal species offer valuable insights into spatial and temporal faunal variation. Our results indicate that existing metabarcode sequence data sets are suitable for mining and exploration of this ‘molecular by-catch’, and that future eDNA-based surveys can be designed to accommodate this enhanced property of this widely applicable tool.
Publisher
ElsevierCitation
Mariani S, Harper, Collins RA, Baillie C, Wangensteen OS, McDevitt, Heddell-Cowie, Genner MJ. Estuarine molecular bycatch as a landscape-wide biomonitoring tool. Biological Conservation. 2021;261Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2021 The Author(s)