Predicting trawl catches using environmental DNA

Author:

Guri Gledis12ORCID,Shelton Andrew Olaf3,Kelly Ryan P4,Yoccoz Nigel5,Johansen Torild1ORCID,Præbel Kim12,Hanebrekke Tanja1,Ray Jessica Louise6,Fall Johanna7ORCID,Westgaard Jon-Ivar1

Affiliation:

1. Norwegian Institute of Marine Research , Framsenteret, Tromsø 9007 , Norway

2. Norwegian College of Fishery Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway , Tromsø 9019 , Norway

3. Northwest Fisheries Science Center, NOAA Fisheries , Seattle, WA 98112 , United States

4. School of Marine and Environmental Affairs, University of Washington , Seattle, WA 98105 , United States

5. Department of Arctic and Marine Biology, UiT The Arctic University of Norway , Tromsø 9019 , Norway

6. NORCE Norwegian Research Centre AS, Climate and Environment Department, Uni Research Environment , N-5020 Bergen , Norway

7. Norwegian Institute of Marine Research , Bergen 5005 , Norway

Abstract

Abstract Quantifying the biomass, or number of individuals, diversity, and distribution of marine species is a critical aspect of understanding and managing marine ecosystems. In recent years, there has been growing interest in using environmental DNA (eDNA) for marine ecosystem management and biodiversity assessment. However, the main challenge hindering eDNA applicability has been the inability to infer absolute species abundances from multispecies analysis (eDNA metabarcoding). In this study, we demonstrate a way forward by estimating the abundance of commercially important fish species in a Norwegian fjord using a joint Bayesian statistical model of traditional trawl-catch data and molecular data derived from eDNA. Using this model, we accurately predict out-of-sample trawl catches using eDNA alone. Moreover, our model provides empirical estimates for key processes linking marine eDNA concentration to the fish population abundance estimated from trawl observations, including trawl catchability, DNA shedding, degradation, dilution, transport, recovery rate, and isolation efficiency. These processes, including amplification efficiencies correcting for Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) bias, are species-specific and enable the translation of eDNA metabarcoding data into abundances. These findings have broad implications for the use of eDNA in marine ecosystem management and conservation efforts.

Funder

FISHDIV

Norwegian Research Council

Institute of Marine Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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