The Core of the Matter—Importance of Identification Method and Biological Replication for Benthic Marine Monitoring
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35860Dato
2024-11-14Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Jensen, Mads Reinholdt; Agersnap, Sune; Egelyng Sigsgaard, Eva; Ávila, Marcelo De Paula; Glenner, Henrik; Wisz, Mary S; Thomsen, Philip FrancisSammendrag
Benthic macrofauna are important and widely used biological indicators of marine ecosystems as they have limited mobility and
therefore integrate the effects of local environmental stressors over time. Recently, environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis has
provided a potentially more resource-efficient approach for benthic biomonitoring than traditional morphology-based methods.
Several studies have compared eDNA with morphology-based monitoring, but few have compared the two approaches using the
exact same sediment cores. In addition, the meiofauna and pelagic organisms obtained as ‘bycatch’ using eDNA have largely
been disregarded from comparisons. Here, we address these shortcomings through comparative invertebrate analyses of six
sediment sample replicates from each of four stations in Denmark, using eDNA metabarcoding and morphological identification. Our results revealed large variation between the six replicates for both methods and little overlap in taxon compositions
between methods. While the morphological dataset was dominated by molluscs and annelids, the eDNA dataset was dominated
by arthropods and annelids. Using community composition data, we found that sampling stations could be distinguished both
with eDNA and morphology. Finally, we inferred expected total richness from extrapolated accumulation curves of detected taxa
from each method. This indicated that eDNA metabarcoding requires less replication than morphology for maximum coverage
of diversity to be reached. However, both methods required high levels of replication, and our results on taxonomic composition
add to the evidence that morphological and eDNA-based methods should preferably be used as complimentary tools for marine
bioassessment.
Forlag
WileySitering
Jensen, Jensen, Agersnap, Egelyng Sigsgaard, Ávila, Glenner, Wisz, Thomsen. The Core of the Matter—Importance of Identification Method and Biological Replication for Benthic Marine Monitoring. Ecology and Evolution. 2024;14(11)Metadata
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