Brute force prey metabarcoding to explore the diets of small invertebrates
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34678Date
2024-05-06Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Prey metabarcoding has become a popular tool in molecular ecology for resolving
trophic interactions at high resolution, from various sample types and animals. To
date, most predator–prey studies of small-sized animals (<1 mm) have met the problem of overabundant predator DNA in dietary samples by adding blocking primers/
peptide nucleic acids. These primers aim to limit the PCR amplification and detection
of the predator DNA but may introduce bias to the prey composition identified by
interacting with sequences that are similar to those of the predator. Here we demonstrate the use of an alternative method to explore the prey of small marine copepods using whole-body DNA extracts and deep, brute force metabarcoding of an 18S
rDNA fragment. After processing and curating raw data from two sequencing runs of
varying depths (0.4 and 5.4 billion raw reads), we isolated 1.3 and 52.2 million prey
reads, with average depths of ~15,900 and ~120,000 prey reads per copepod individual, respectively. While data from both sequencing runs were sufficient to distinguish
dietary compositions from disparate seasons, locations, and copepod species, greater
sequencing depth led to better separation of clusters. As computation and sequencing are becoming ever more powerful and affordable, we expect the brute force approach to become a general standard for prey metabarcoding, as it offers a simple and
affordable solution to consumers that is impractical to dissect or unknown to science.
Publisher
WileyCitation
Flo, Vader, Præbel. Brute force prey metabarcoding to explore the diets of small invertebrates. Ecology and Evolution. 2024;14(5)Metadata
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