eDNA metabarcoding reveals riverine fish community structure and climate associations in northeastern Canada

Author:

Crowley Samantha E.1ORCID,Bentzen Paul1,Kess Tony2,Duffy Steven J.2,Messmer Amber M.2,Watson Beth1,Dempson J. Brian2,Keefe Donald G.3,Perry Robert C.4,Marquis Benjamin5,Hajibabaei Mehrdad67,Fahner Nicole6,Berghuis Lesley6,Hobrecker Kerry6,Bradbury Ian R.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology Dalhousie University Halifax Nova Scotia Canada

2. Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Centre Fisheries and Oceans Canada St. John's Newfoundland and Labrador Canada

3. Wildlife Division, Fisheries, Forestry and Agriculture Corner Brook Newfoundland and Labrador Canada

4. Fish and Wildlife Division, Department of Environment Government of Yukon Whitehorse Yukon Canada

5. Great Lakes Forestry Center, Natural Resources Canada Sault Ste Marie Ontario Canada

6. Centre for Environmental Genomics Applications eDNAtec Inc St. Johns Newfoundland and Labrador Canada

7. Department of Integrative Biology & Centre for Biodiversity Genomics University of Guelph Guelph Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractClimate change is a critical threat to northern freshwater ecosystems, yet many remote areas are data deficient in terms of biodiversity information. Generating community composition data through collection of environmental DNA (eDNA) is less labor‐intensive than traditional sampling methods and is being increasingly used in areas that have been historically difficult to sample such as northern freshwater habitats. Here, we employed eDNA metabarcoding using three mitochondrial markers at 174 coastal river sites, sampled over three years (2019–2021) across a broad region in northeastern North America, Newfoundland and Labrador. We characterized current riverine fish community composition, compared it to traditional sampling records, and quantified the influence of climate on variation in fish community composition. The analysis detected 33 fish species across the region (1–13 per location), including three non‐native species, as well as several new possible range expansions. Variance partitioning with redundancy analysis indicated ~56% of the variation in community composition could be explained by spatial and climate factors (~21% and ~7%, respectively, with an additional ~28% shared). A temporal comparison across a subset of locations with both eDNA and historical records (1965–1985) revealed that more species were detected on average with eDNA sampling, and that sampling method explained a small portion of the variation (~4%) in comparison with space (~10%) and climate (~7%). Ultimately, this work is the most complete survey of freshwater and diadromous fishes present in Newfoundland and Labrador to date, highlights new detections of non‐native species including previously unknown diversity for the region, and provides future direction for the application of eDNA analysis in northern riverine habitats.

Publisher

Wiley

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