Using surface environmental DNA to assess arthropod biodiversity within a forested ecosystem

Author:

Allen Michael C.1ORCID,Lockwood Julie L.1,Kwait Robert1,Vastano Anthony R.1,Peterson Donnie L.1ORCID,Tkacenko Leon A.1,Kisurin Alex1,Stringham Oliver2,Angle Jordan3,Jaffe Benjamin4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources, Rutgers The State University of New Jersey New Brunswick New Jersey USA

2. Institute of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Science, Rutgers The State University of New Jersey New Brunswick New Jersey USA

3. ExxonMobil Engineering and Technology Company Texas USA

4. ExxonMobil Research Qatar Doha Qatar

Abstract

AbstractTerrestrial arthropods are a diverse taxonomic group of significant ecological and economic importance. Our ability to understand the diversity that comprises this group is hampered by the variety of sampling techniques and high level of taxonomic expertise required to identify individual species. DNA metabarcoding approaches have potential to overcome these challenges but have been mainly limited to studies where DNA is directly extracted from trapped individuals. We posit that collection of environmental DNA (eDNA) deposited on vegetation surfaces could provide an alternative method of conducting metabarcoding‐based arthropod inventories. In this study, we illustrate the promise of characterizing arthropod biodiversity based on eDNA collected from terrestrial plant surfaces. We collected 40 paired samples using two novel eDNA sampling techniques—tree bark and foliage sampling—in a New Jersey, USA, pine barrens forest. Metabarcoding using two primer sets revealed significantly higher taxonomic richness for the 16S versus COI primer set (1077 vs. 650 molecular operational taxonomic units; MOTUs), as well as higher richness and diversity in foliage versus bark samples. Accumulation curves suggest that our samples captured about half of the available MOTU‐level diversity. Matching to reference databases revealed 28 arthropod orders, 181 families, 353 genera, and 292 species. Despite having lower MOTU‐level richness, the COI primer set revealed more taxa that were identified to species (197 vs. 115) and genus (227 vs. 173) thanks to a more complete reference database. The two primer sets and sampling substrates showed distinct community compositions that differed in important ecological traits (feeding guild, body size), demonstrating the utility of a multi‐faceted sampling and analytical approach. Our study highlights the value of exploiting eDNA left on plant surfaces via metabarcoding for contributing to rapid arthropod inventories, and thus realizing a range of ecological research and management goals.

Funder

Exxon Mobil Corporation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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