Sedimentary DNA can reveal the past population dynamics of a pelagic copepod

Author:

Nakane Kai1,Liu Xin2,Doi Hideyuki3ORCID,Dur Gaël4ORCID,Kuwae Michinobu1ORCID,Ban Syuhei2ORCID,Tsugeki Narumi5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Marine Environmental Studies Ehime University Matsuyama Ehime Japan

2. Department of Ecosystem Studies, School of Environmental Science The University of Shiga Prefecture Hikone Shiga Japan

3. Graduate School of Informatics Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

4. Creative Science Unit (Geoscience), Faculty of Science Shizuoka University Shizuoka Japan

5. Faculty of Law Matsuyama University Matsuyama Ehime Japan

Abstract

Abstract Copepods play a key trophic role as secondary producers, transferring primary production to higher trophic levels such as fish. Copepod production contributes significantly to successful fish recruitment. Despite their importance, knowledge of copepod dynamics over several decades remains limited due to the lack of long‐term data series with adequate sampling and analysis. However, an understanding of long‐term copepod dynamics is urgently required to strive toward better management for sustainable aquatic ecosystems and fish recruitment. Sedimentary DNA (sedDNA) has been developing as a useful tool for reconstructing past plankton dynamics. This study evaluates whether sedDNA targeting the pelagic copepod, Eodiaptomus japonicus, in Lake Biwa (Japan) can be an effective tool for elucidating its past population dynamics. We applied a quantitative polymerase chain reaction method targeting the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I gene on two sediment cores and compared the detected sedDNA concentrations with the unique long‐term dataset of demographic traits, biomass, specific growth rate, production, subitaneous eggs, and resting eggs of E. japonicus. The sedDNA concentration of E. japonicus recovered from sediment layers correlated significantly with in situ production, biomass, and production of immediately hatching eggs but not with resting eggs or specific growth rate. Our study provides evidence for the effective use of sedDNA as a tracking tool for assessing past copepod production dynamics.

Funder

Kyoto University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science

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