Literature DB >> 33846371

Evaluating sediment and water sampling methods for the estimation of deep-sea biodiversity using environmental DNA.

Miriam I Brandt1, Florence Pradillon2, Blandine Trouche3, Nicolas Henry4, Cathy Liautard-Haag5, Marie-Anne Cambon-Bonavita3, Valérie Cueff-Gauchard3, Patrick Wincker6, Caroline Belser6, Julie Poulain6, Sophie Arnaud-Haond7, Daniela Zeppilli2.   

Abstract

Despite representing one of the largest biomes on earth, biodiversity of the deep seafloor is still poorly known. Environmental DNA metabarcoding offers prospects for fast inventories and surveys, yet requires standardized sampling approaches and careful choice of environmental substrate. Here, we aimed to optimize the genetic assessment of prokaryote (16S), protistan (18S V4), and metazoan (18S V1-V2, COI) communities, by evaluating sampling strategies for sediment and aboveground water, deployed simultaneously at one deep-sea site. For sediment, while size-class sorting through sieving had no significant effect on total detected alpha diversity and resolved similar taxonomic compositions at the phylum level for all markers studied, it effectively increased the detection of meiofauna phyla. For water, large volumes obtained from an in situ pump (~ 6000 L) detected significantly more metazoan diversity than 7.5 L collected in sampling boxes. However, the pump being limited by larger mesh sizes (> 20 µm), only captured a fraction of microbial diversity, while sampling boxes allowed access to the pico- and nanoplankton. More importantly, communities characterized by aboveground water samples significantly differed from those characterized by sediment, whatever volume used, and both sample types only shared between 3 and 8% of molecular units. Together, these results underline that sediment sieving may be recommended when targeting metazoans, and aboveground water does not represent an alternative to sediment sampling for inventories of benthic diversity.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33846371     DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-86396-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Rep        ISSN: 2045-2322            Impact factor:   4.379


  43 in total

1.  Environmental DNA.

Authors:  Pierre Taberlet; Eric Coissac; Mehrdad Hajibabaei; Loren H Rieseberg
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2012-04       Impact factor: 6.185

2.  Microbial diversity in the deep-sea sediments of Iheya North and Iheya Ridge, Okinawa Trough.

Authors:  Jian Zhang; Qing-lei Sun; Zhi-gang Zeng; Shuai Chen; Li Sun
Journal:  Microbiol Res       Date:  2015-05-23       Impact factor: 5.415

3.  Microbial diversity in deep-sea sediment from the cobalt-rich crust deposit region in the Pacific Ocean.

Authors:  Li Liao; Xue-Wei Xu; Xia-Wei Jiang; Chun-Sheng Wang; Dong-Sheng Zhang; Jian-Yu Ni; Min Wu
Journal:  FEMS Microbiol Ecol       Date:  2011-09-15       Impact factor: 4.194

4.  Permeability shapes bacterial communities in sublittoral surface sediments.

Authors:  D Probandt; K Knittel; H E Tegetmeyer; S Ahmerkamp; M Holtappels; R Amann
Journal:  Environ Microbiol       Date:  2017-02-07       Impact factor: 5.491

5.  Benthic protists: the under-charted majority.

Authors:  Dominik Forster; Micah Dunthorn; Fréderic Mahé; John R Dolan; Stéphane Audic; David Bass; Lucie Bittner; Christophe Boutte; Richard Christen; Jean-Michel Claverie; Johan Decelle; Bente Edvardsen; Elianne Egge; Wenche Eikrem; Angélique Gobet; Wiebe H C F Kooistra; Ramiro Logares; Ramon Massana; Marina Montresor; Fabrice Not; Hiroyuki Ogata; Jan Pawlowski; Massimo C Pernice; Sarah Romac; Kamran Shalchian-Tabrizi; Nathalie Simon; Thomas A Richards; Sébastien Santini; Diana Sarno; Raffaele Siano; Daniel Vaulot; Patrick Wincker; Adriana Zingone; Colomban de Vargas; Thorsten Stoeck
Journal:  FEMS Microbiol Ecol       Date:  2016-06-05       Impact factor: 4.194

6.  Marine biomonitoring with eDNA: Can metabarcoding of water samples cut it as a tool for surveying benthic communities?

Authors:  Adrià Antich; Cruz Palacín; Emma Cebrian; Raül Golo; Owen S Wangensteen; Xavier Turon
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2020-10-08       Impact factor: 6.185

7.  Global patterns of bacterial beta-diversity in seafloor and seawater ecosystems.

Authors:  Lucie Zinger; Linda A Amaral-Zettler; Jed A Fuhrman; M Claire Horner-Devine; Susan M Huse; David B Mark Welch; Jennifer B H Martiny; Mitchell Sogin; Antje Boetius; Alban Ramette
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-09-08       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Controlled sampling of ribosomally active protistan diversity in sediment-surface layers identifies putative players in the marine carbon sink.

Authors:  Raquel Rodríguez-Martínez; Guy Leonard; David S Milner; Sebastian Sudek; Mike Conway; Karen Moore; Theresa Hudson; Frédéric Mahé; Patrick J Keeling; Alyson E Santoro; Alexandra Z Worden; Thomas A Richards
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2020-01-09       Impact factor: 10.302

9.  Diversity and Biogeography of Bathyal and Abyssal Seafloor Bacteria.

Authors:  Christina Bienhold; Lucie Zinger; Antje Boetius; Alban Ramette
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-01-27       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Ciliate diversity and distribution patterns in the sediments of a seamount and adjacent abyssal plains in the tropical Western Pacific Ocean.

Authors:  Feng Zhao; Sabine Filker; Thorsten Stoeck; Kuidong Xu
Journal:  BMC Microbiol       Date:  2017-09-12       Impact factor: 3.605

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  1 in total

1.  Environmental DNA from Marine Waters and Substrates: Protocols for Sampling and eDNA Extraction.

Authors:  Dominique A Cowart; Katherine R Murphy; C-H Christina Cheng
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2022
  1 in total

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