TY - JOUR
T1 - How many replicates to accurately estimate fish biodiversity using environmental DNA on coral reefs?
AU - Stauffer, Salomé
AU - Jucker, Meret
AU - Keggin, Thomas
AU - Marques, Virginie
AU - Andrello, Marco
AU - Bessudo, Sandra
AU - Cheutin, Marie Charlotte
AU - Borrero-Pérez, Giomar Helena
AU - Richards, Eilísh
AU - Dejean, Tony
AU - Hocdé, Régis
AU - Juhel, Jean Baptiste
AU - Ladino, Felipe
AU - Letessier, Tom B.
AU - Loiseau, Nicolas
AU - Maire, Eva
AU - Mouillot, David
AU - Mutis Martinezguerra, Maria
AU - Manel, Stéphanie
AU - Polanco Fernández, Andrea
AU - Valentini, Alice
AU - Velez, Laure
AU - Albouy, Camille
AU - Pellissier, Loïc
AU - Waldock, Conor
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2021/11
Y1 - 2021/11
N2 - Quantifying fish species diversity in rich tropical marine environments remains challenging. Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding is a promising tool to face this challenge through the filtering, amplification, and sequencing of DNA traces from water samples. However, because eDNA concentration is low in marine environments, the reliability of eDNA to detect species diversity can be limited. Using an eDNA metabarcoding approach to identify fish Molecular Taxonomic Units (MOTUs) with a single 12S marker, we aimed to assess how the number of sampling replicates and filtered water volume affect biodiversity estimates. We used a paired sampling design of 30 L per replicate on 68 reef transects from 8 sites in 3 tropical regions. We quantified local and regional sampling variability by comparing MOTU richness, compositional turnover, and compositional nestedness. We found strong turnover of MOTUs between replicated pairs of samples undertaken in the same location, time, and conditions. Paired samples contained non-overlapping assemblages rather than subsets of one another. As a result, non-saturated localized diversity accumulation curves suggest that even 6 replicates (180 L) in the same location can underestimate local diversity (for an area <1 km). However, sampling regional diversity using ~25 replicates in variable locations (often covering 10 s of km) often saturated biodiversity accumulation curves. Our results demonstrate variability of diversity estimates possibly arising from heterogeneous distribution of eDNA in seawater, highly skewed frequencies of eDNA traces per MOTU, in addition to variability in eDNA processing. This high compositional variability has consequences for using eDNA to monitor temporal and spatial biodiversity changes in local assemblages. Avoiding false-negative detections in future biomonitoring efforts requires increasing replicates or sampled water volume to better inform management of marine biodiversity using eDNA.
AB - Quantifying fish species diversity in rich tropical marine environments remains challenging. Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding is a promising tool to face this challenge through the filtering, amplification, and sequencing of DNA traces from water samples. However, because eDNA concentration is low in marine environments, the reliability of eDNA to detect species diversity can be limited. Using an eDNA metabarcoding approach to identify fish Molecular Taxonomic Units (MOTUs) with a single 12S marker, we aimed to assess how the number of sampling replicates and filtered water volume affect biodiversity estimates. We used a paired sampling design of 30 L per replicate on 68 reef transects from 8 sites in 3 tropical regions. We quantified local and regional sampling variability by comparing MOTU richness, compositional turnover, and compositional nestedness. We found strong turnover of MOTUs between replicated pairs of samples undertaken in the same location, time, and conditions. Paired samples contained non-overlapping assemblages rather than subsets of one another. As a result, non-saturated localized diversity accumulation curves suggest that even 6 replicates (180 L) in the same location can underestimate local diversity (for an area <1 km). However, sampling regional diversity using ~25 replicates in variable locations (often covering 10 s of km) often saturated biodiversity accumulation curves. Our results demonstrate variability of diversity estimates possibly arising from heterogeneous distribution of eDNA in seawater, highly skewed frequencies of eDNA traces per MOTU, in addition to variability in eDNA processing. This high compositional variability has consequences for using eDNA to monitor temporal and spatial biodiversity changes in local assemblages. Avoiding false-negative detections in future biomonitoring efforts requires increasing replicates or sampled water volume to better inform management of marine biodiversity using eDNA.
KW - biomonitoring
KW - coral reef diversity
KW - environmental DNA
KW - MOTU
KW - sampling variability
KW - tropical marine ecosystems
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85116440996
U2 - 10.1002/ece3.8150
DO - 10.1002/ece3.8150
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85116440996
SN - 2045-7758
VL - 11
SP - 14630
EP - 14643
JO - Ecology and Evolution
JF - Ecology and Evolution
IS - 21
ER -