Author:
Hendricks Andre,Mackie Connor M.,Luy Edward,Sonnichsen Colin,Smith James,Grundke Iain,Tavasoli Mahtab,Furlong Arnold,Beiko Robert G.,LaRoche Julie,Sieben Vincent
Abstract
AbstractUsing environmental DNA (eDNA) to monitor biodiversity in aquatic environments is becoming an efficient and cost-effective alternative to other methods such as visual and acoustic identification. Until recently, eDNA sampling was accomplished primarily through manual sampling methods; however, with technological advances, automated samplers are being developed to make sampling easier and more accessible. This paper describes a new eDNA sampler capable of self-cleaning and multi-sample capture and preservation, all within a single unit capable of being deployed by a single person. The first in-field test of this sampler took place in the Bedford Basin, Nova Scotia, Canada alongside parallel samples taken using the typical Niskin bottle collection and post-collection filtration method. Both methods were able to capture the same aquatic microbial community and counts of representative DNA sequences were well correlated between methods with R$$^{2}$$
2
values ranging from 0.71–0.93. The two collection methods returned the same top 10 families in near identical relative abundance, demonstrating that the sampler was able to capture the same community composition of common microbes as the Niskin. The presented eDNA sampler provides a robust alternative to manual sampling methods, is amenable to autonomous vehicle payload constraints, and will facilitate persistent monitoring of remote and inaccessible sites.
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Canada First Research Excellence Fund
Canadian Foundation for Innovation
National Research Council Canada
Canada’s Ocean Supercluster
Mitacs Industrial Postdoc Fellowship Program
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
16 articles.
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