Plant-derived environmental DNA complements diversity estimates from traditional arthropod monitoring methods but outperforms them detecting plant–arthropod interactions

IF 5.5 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY Molecular Ecology Resources Pub Date : 2023-11-27 DOI:10.1111/1755-0998.13900
Sven Weber, Manuel Stothut, Lisa Mahla, Alanah Kripp, Lena Hirschler, Nina Lenz, Anneke Junker, Sven Künzel, Henrik Krehenwinkel
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Abstract

Our limited knowledge about the ecological drivers of global arthropod decline highlights the urgent need for more effective biodiversity monitoring approaches. Monitoring of arthropods is commonly performed using passive trapping devices, which reliably recover diverse communities, but provide little ecological information on the sampled taxa. Especially the manifold interactions of arthropods with plants are barely understood. A promising strategy to overcome this shortfall is environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding from plant material on which arthropods leave DNA traces through direct or indirect interactions. However, the accuracy of this approach has not been sufficiently tested. In four experiments, we exhaustively test the comparative performance of plant-derived eDNA from surface washes of plants and homogenized plant material against traditional monitoring approaches. We show that the recovered communities of plant-derived eDNA and traditional approaches only partly overlap, with eDNA recovering various additional taxa. This suggests eDNA as a useful complementary tool to traditional monitoring. Despite the differences in recovered taxa, estimates of community α- and β-diversity between both approaches are well correlated, highlighting the utility of eDNA as a broad scale tool for community monitoring. Last, eDNA outperforms traditional approaches in the recovery of plant-specific arthropod communities. Unlike traditional monitoring, eDNA revealed fine-scale community differentiation between individual plants and even within plant compartments. Especially specialized herbivores are better recovered with eDNA. Our results highlight the value of plant-derived eDNA analysis for large-scale biodiversity assessments that include information about community-level interactions.

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植物来源的环境DNA补充了传统节肢动物监测方法的多样性估计,但在检测植物-节肢动物相互作用方面优于传统方法。
我们对全球节肢动物数量减少的生态驱动因素了解有限,因此迫切需要更有效的生物多样性监测方法。节肢动物的监测通常采用被动捕获装置,这种方法可以可靠地恢复不同的群落,但提供的生态信息很少。特别是节肢动物与植物之间的多种相互作用几乎不为人所知。克服这一缺陷的一种有希望的策略是从植物材料中提取环境DNA (eDNA)元条形码,节肢动物通过直接或间接的相互作用在其上留下DNA痕迹。然而,这种方法的准确性还没有得到充分的检验。在四个实验中,我们详尽地测试了来自植物表面洗涤和均质植物材料的植物来源的eDNA与传统监测方法的比较性能。我们发现,植物来源的eDNA和传统方法的恢复群落只有部分重叠,eDNA恢复了各种额外的分类群。这表明eDNA是传统监测的有用补充工具。尽管恢复的分类群存在差异,但两种方法之间的群落α-和β-多样性估计值具有良好的相关性,这突出了eDNA作为群落监测的广泛工具的实用性。最后,eDNA在植物特异性节肢动物群落恢复方面优于传统方法。与传统的监测不同,eDNA揭示了植物个体之间甚至植物室内的精细尺度的群落分化。尤其是特殊的食草动物,用eDNA能更好地恢复。我们的研究结果强调了植物来源的eDNA分析在大规模生物多样性评估中的价值,包括关于社区水平相互作用的信息。
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来源期刊
Molecular Ecology Resources
Molecular Ecology Resources 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
15.60
自引率
5.20%
发文量
170
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Molecular Ecology Resources promotes the creation of comprehensive resources for the scientific community, encompassing computer programs, statistical and molecular advancements, and a diverse array of molecular tools. Serving as a conduit for disseminating these resources, the journal targets a broad audience of researchers in the fields of evolution, ecology, and conservation. Articles in Molecular Ecology Resources are crafted to support investigations tackling significant questions within these disciplines. In addition to original resource articles, Molecular Ecology Resources features Reviews, Opinions, and Comments relevant to the field. The journal also periodically releases Special Issues focusing on resource development within specific areas.
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