Maximizing sampling efficiency to detect differences in fish community composition using environmental DNA metabarcoding in subarctic fjords
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30031Date
2023-04-14Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Guri, Gledis; Westgaard, Jon-Ivar; Yoccoz, Nigel; Wangensteen, Owen S.; Præbel, Kim; Ray, Jessica Louise; Kelly, Ryan P.; Shelton, Andrew Olaf; Hanebrekke, Tanja Lexau; Johansen, TorildAbstract
Environmental DNA (eDNA) has gained popularity as a tool for ecosystem biomonitoring and biodiversity assessment. Although much progress has been made regarding
laboratory and fieldwork protocols, the issue of sampling efficiency requires further
investigation, particularly in three-dimensional marine systems. This study focuses
on fish community composition in marine ecosystems and aims to analyze the efficiency of sampling design given the sampling effort for distinguishing between different communities. We sampled three fjords in Northern Norway, taking samples
along fjord transects and at three different depths, and amplified a fragment of the
mitochondrial 12S rRNA gene of bony fishes using the MiFish primers. We evaluated the effect of (i) the number of sampling stations, (ii) samples' spatial distribution,
and (iii) the data treatment approach (presence/absence versus semiquantitative) for
maximizing the efficiency of eDNA metabarcoding sampling when inferring differences of fish community compositions between fjords. We found that the manner of
data treatment strongly affected the minimum number of sampling stations required
to detect differences among communities; because the semiquantitative approach
retained some information about abundance of the underlying reads, it was the most
efficient. Furthermore, we found little-to-no difference of fish communities in samples from intermediate depths when comparing vertical fish communities. Lastly, we
found that the differences between fish communities at the surface were the highest
across the horizontal distance and overall, samples ~30 km apart showed the highest
variation in the horizontal distribution. Boosting sampling efficiency (reducing sampling effort without compromising ecological inferences) can significantly contribute
to enhanced biodiversity management and efficient biomonitoring plans.
Is part of
Guri, G. (2024). Integrating environmental DNA into marine management. (Doctoral thesis). https://hdl.handle.net/10037/33440.Publisher
WileyCitation
Guri, Westgaard, Yoccoz, Wangensteen, Præbel, Ray, Kelly, Shelton, Hanebrekke, Johansen. Maximizing sampling efficiency to detect differences in fish community composition using environmental DNA metabarcoding in subarctic fjords. Environmental DNA. 2023Metadata
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