Environmental DNA analysis as an emerging non-destructive method for plant biodiversity monitoring: a review

Author:

Banerjee Pritam12,Stewart Kathryn A3,Dey Gobinda12,Antognazza Caterina M4,Sharma Raju Kumar25,Maity Jyoti Prakash6,Saha Santanu7,Doi Hideyuki8,de Vere Natasha9,Chan Michael W Y1,Lin Pin-Yun25,Chao Hung-Chun2,Chen Chien-Yen210

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Graduate Institute of Molecular Biology, National Chung Cheng University , 168 University Road, Min-Hsiung, Chiayi County 62102 , Taiwan

2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, National Chung Cheng University , 168 University Road, Min-Hsiung, Chiayi County 62102 , Taiwan

3. Institute of Environmental Science, Leiden University , 2333 CC Leiden , The Netherlands

4. Department of Theoretical and Applied Science, University of Insubria , Via J.H. Dunant, 3, 21100 Varese , Italy

5. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, National Chung Cheng University , 168 University Road, Min-Hsiung, Chiayi County 62102 , Taiwan

6. Department of Chemistry, School of Applied Sciences, KIIT Deemed to be University , Bhubaneswar, Odisha 751024 , India

7. Post Graduate Department of Botany, Bidhannagar College , Salt Lake City, Kolkata 700064 , India

8. Graduate School of Information Science, University of Hyogo , 7-1-28 Minatojima-minamimachi, Chuo-ku, Kobe 650-0047 , Japan

9. Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, Øster Voldgade 5-7, 1350 Copenhagen K

10. Center for Nano Bio-Detection, Center for Innovative Research on Aging Society, AIM-HI, National Chung Cheng University , Chiayi 62102 , Taiwan

Abstract

Abstract Environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis has recently transformed and modernized biodiversity monitoring. The accurate detection, and to some extent quantification, of organisms (individuals/populations/communities) in environmental samples is galvanizing eDNA as a successful cost and time-efficient biomonitoring technique. Currently, eDNA’s application to plants remains more limited in implementation and scope compared to animals and microorganisms. This review evaluates the development of eDNA-based methods for (vascular) plants, comparing its performance and power of detection with that of traditional methods, to critically evaluate and advise best-practices needed to innovate plant biomonitoring. Recent advancements, standardization and field applications of eDNA-based methods have provided enough scope to utilize it in conservation biology for numerous organisms. Despite our review demonstrating only 13% of all eDNA studies focus on plant taxa to date, eDNA has considerable environmental DNA has considerable potential for plants, where successful detection of invasive, endangered and rare species, and community-level interpretations have provided proof-of-concept. Monitoring methods using eDNA were found to be equal or more effective than traditional methods; however, species detection increased when both methods were coupled. Additionally, eDNA methods were found to be effective in studying species interactions, community dynamics and even effects of anthropogenic pressure. Currently, elimination of potential obstacles (e.g. lack of relevant DNA reference libraries for plants) and the development of user-friendly protocols would greatly contribute to comprehensive eDNA-based plant monitoring programs. This is particularly needed in the data-depauperate tropics and for some plant groups (e.g., Bryophytes and Pteridophytes). We further advocate to coupling traditional methods with eDNA approaches, as the former is often cheaper and methodologically more straightforward, while the latter offers non-destructive approaches with increased discrimination ability. Furthermore, to make a global platform for eDNA, governmental and academic-industrial collaborations are essential to make eDNA surveys a broadly adopted and implemented, rapid, cost-effective and non-invasive plant monitoring approach.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology

National Chung Cheng University

Ministry of Education

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science

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