Affiliation:
1. College of Forest Resources and Environmental Science, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI, United States of America
Abstract
Environmental DNA (eDNA) analyses are an increasingly popular tool for assessing biodiversity. eDNA sampling that uses invertebrates, or invertebrate DNA (iDNA), has become a more common method in mammal biodiversity studies where biodiversity is assessed via diet analysis of different coprophagous or hematophagous invertebrates. The carrion feeding family of beetles (Silphidae: Coleoptera, Latreille (1807)), have not yet been established as a viable iDNA source in primary scientific literature, yet could be useful indicators for tracking biodiversity in forested ecosystems. Silphids find carcasses of varying size for both food and reproduction, with some species having host preference for small mammals; therefore, iDNA Silphid studies could potentially target small mammal communities. To establish the first valid use of iDNA methods to detect Silphid diets, we conducted a study with the objective of testing the validity of iDNA methods applied to Silphids using both Sanger sequencing and high throughput Illumina sequencing. Beetles were collected using inexpensive pitfall traps in Alberta, Michigan in 2019 and 2022. We successfully sequenced diet DNA and environmental DNA from externally swabbed Silphid samples and diet DNA from gut dissections, confirming their potential as an iDNA tool in mammalian studies. Our results demonstrate the usefulness of Silphids for iDNA research where we detected species from the genera Anaxyrus, Blarina, Procyon, Condylura, Peromyscus, Canis, and Bos. Our results highlight the potential for Silphid iDNA to be used in future wildlife surveys.
Funder
The Ecosystem Science Center, Pavlis Honors College
College of Forest Resources and Environmental Science at Michigan Technological University
The United States Department of Agriculture- National Institute of Food and Agriculture
Reference34 articles.
1. Shifting up a gear with iDNA: from mammal detection events to standardised surveys;Abrams;Journal of Applied Ecology,2019
2. Resource partitioning in the carrion beetle (Coleoptera:Silphidae) fauna of southern Ontario: ecological and evolutionary considerations;Anderson;Canadian Journal of Zoology,1982
3. Animal and Artificial Bait Preference of Silphidae and a Citizen Science Project on the American Burying Beetle, Nicrophorus americanus;Andrew;BS Dissertation,2016
4. Comparative effectiveness of Longworth and Sherman live traps;Anthony;Wildlife Society Bulletin,2005