Merging two eDNA metabarcoding approaches and citizen‐science‐based sampling to facilitate fish community monitoring along vast Sub‐Saharan coastlines

Author:

Burian Alfred12ORCID,Bruce Kat3,Tovela Erica4,Bakker Judith3ORCID,Balcells Laura3,Bennett Rhett5,Chordekar Sarah3ORCID,Costa Hugo M.5,Crampton‐Platt Alex3ORCID,de Boer Hugo6ORCID,Ross‐Gillespie Vere3ORCID,de Sacramento Antonio7,Sidat Naseeba5,Simbine Luisa8,Ready Jonathan9ORCID,Tang Cuong3,Mauvisseau Quentin6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Computational Landscape Ecology UFZ–Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research Leipzig Germany

2. Marine Ecology Department Lurio University Nampula Mozambique

3. NatureMetrics Guildford UK

4. Natural History Museum University Eduardo Mondlane Maputo Mozambique

5. Wildlife Conservation Society Maputo Mozambique

6. Natural History Museum University of Oslo Oslo Norway

7. Ocean Revolution (ORM) Mozambique, Praia do Tofo Inhambane Mozambique

8. Instituto Oceanográfico de Moçambique, Ministério do Mar, Águas Interiores e Pescas Maputo Mozambique

9. Universidade Federal do Pará, Grupo de Investigação Biológica Integrada, Centro de Estudos Avançados da Biodiversidade Belem Brazil

Abstract

AbstractThe coastline of Sub‐Saharan Africa hosts highly diverse fish communities of great conservation value, which are also key resources for local livelihoods. However, many costal ecosystems are threatened by overexploitation and their conservation state is frequently unknown due to their vast spatial extent and limited monitoring budgets. Here, we evaluated the potential of citizen science‐based eDNA surveys to alleviate such chronic data deficiencies and assessed fish communities in Mozambique using two 12S metabarcoding primer sets. Samples were either collected by scientific personnel or trained community members and results from the two metabarcoding primers were combined using a new data merging approach. Irrespective of the background of sampling personnel, a high average fish species richness was recorded (38 ± 20 OTUs per sample). Individual sections of the coastline largely differed in the occurrence of threatened and commercially important species, highlighting the need for regionally differentiated management strategies. A detailed comparison of the two applied primer sets revealed an important trade‐off in primer choice with MiFish primers amplifying a higher number of species but Riaz primers performing better in the detection of threatened fish species. This trade‐off could be partly resolved by applying our new data‐merging approach, which was especially designed to increase the robustness of multiprimer assessments in regions with poor reference libraries. Overall, our study provides encouraging results but also highlights that eDNA‐based monitoring will require further improvements of, for example, reference databases and local analytical infrastructure to facilitate routine applications in Sub‐Saharan Africa.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Biotechnology

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