| Literature DB >> 28921802 |
Kristy Deiner1, Holly M Bik2, Elvira Mächler3,4, Mathew Seymour5, Anaïs Lacoursière-Roussel6, Florian Altermatt3,4, Simon Creer5, Iliana Bista5,7, David M Lodge1, Natasha de Vere8,9, Michael E Pfrender10, Louis Bernatchez6.
Abstract
The genomic revolution has fundamentally changed how we survey biodiversity on earth. High-throughput sequencing ("HTS") platforms now enable the rapid sequencing of DNA from diverse kinds of environmental samples (termed "environmental DNA" or "eDNA"). Coupling HTS with our ability to associate sequences from eDNA with a taxonomic name is called "eDNA metabarcoding" and offers a powerful molecular tool capable of noninvasively surveying species richness from many ecosystems. Here, we review the use of eDNA metabarcoding for surveying animal and plant richness, and the challenges in using eDNA approaches to estimate relative abundance. We highlight eDNA applications in freshwater, marine and terrestrial environments, and in this broad context, we distill what is known about the ability of different eDNA sample types to approximate richness in space and across time. We provide guiding questions for study design and discuss the eDNA metabarcoding workflow with a focus on primers and library preparation methods. We additionally discuss important criteria for consideration of bioinformatic filtering of data sets, with recommendations for increasing transparency. Finally, looking to the future, we discuss emerging applications of eDNA metabarcoding in ecology, conservation, invasion biology, biomonitoring, and how eDNA metabarcoding can empower citizen science and biodiversity education.Entities:
Keywords: bioinformatic pipeline; biomonitoring; citizen science; conservation; eDNA; ecology; invasive species; macro-organism; species richness
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28921802 DOI: 10.1111/mec.14350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ecol ISSN: 0962-1083 Impact factor: 6.185