Environmental DNA metabarcoding describes biodiversity across marine gradients

Author:

Adams Clare I M1ORCID,Jeunen Gert-Jan2,Cross Hugh3,Taylor Helen R4,Bagnaro Antoine5,Currie Kim67,Hepburn Chris5,Gemmell Neil J2,Urban Lara8,Baltar Federico9,Stat Michael10,Bunce Michael11,Knapp Michael12

Affiliation:

1. Coastal People Southern Skies Centre of Research Excellence, Ministry for Primary Industries, Charles Fergusson Building, 34-38 Bowen Street, Pipitea , Wellington 6011 , New Zealand

2. Department of Anatomy, University of Otago, Dunedin , Otago, 9016 , New Zealand

3. National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON), Boulder , CO, 80301 , USA

4. Royal Zoological Society of Scotland , Edinburgh EH12 6TS , UK

5. Coastal People Southern Skies Centre of Research Excellence, Department of Marine Science, University of Otago, Dunedin , Otago, 9016 , New Zealand

6. Coastal People Southern Skies Centre of Research Excellence, Department of Chemistry, University of Otago, Dunedin , Otago, 9016 , New Zealand

7. NIWA / University of Otago Research Centre for Oceanography, Dunedin , Otago, 9016 , New Zealand

8. Helmholtz Munich, Ingolstädter Landstraße , 185764 Neuherberg , Germany

9. Department of Functional and Evolutionary Ecology, University of Vienna , Vienna 1090 , Austria

10. School of Environmental and Life Sciences, University of Newcastle, Callaghan , NSW 2300 , Australia

11. Department of Conservation, Conservation House, 18 - 32 Manners Street, Te Aro , Wellington 6011 , New Zealand

12. Coastal People Southern Skies Centre of Research Excellence, Department of Anatomy, University of Otago, Dunedin , Otago, 9016 , New Zealand

Abstract

Abstract In response to climate change, biodiversity patterns in the oceans are predicted to shift rapidly, thus increasing the need for efficient monitoring methods. Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding recently emerged as a potent and cost-effective candidate to answer this challenge. We targeted three molecular markers to determine multicellular metazoan communities from two timepoints across a long-standing transect in the Southern Hemisphere, the Munida Observational Time Series. We detected four community types across the successive water masses—neritic, sub-tropical, frontal, and sub-Antarctic—crossed by the transect, together with important community differences between the two sampling points. From indicator species analysis, we found diversity patterns were mostly driven by planktonic organisms. Mesopelagic communities differed from surface-water communities in the sub-Antarctic water mass, with at-depth communities dominated by single-cellular organisms. We evaluate the ability of eDNA to detect species-compositional changes across surface and depth gradients and lay the foundations for using this technique in multi-trophic environmental monitoring efforts across long time series. We observed community differences across time and space. More intensive sampling will be critical to fully capture diversity across marine gradients, but this multi-trophic method represents an invaluable opportunity to understand shifts in marine biota.

Funder

University of Otago

University of Otago Doctoral Scholarship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

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