M. Aravinda Kishan Peiris, Shang-Yin Vanson Liu, Joseph D. DiBattista, Michael Bunce, Yi-Hsuan Chen, Kang-Ning Shen, Chih-Wei Chang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Coral reefs are known to be one of the most diverse marine ecosystems on earth. However, these important ecosystems are heavily stressed by natural and anthropogenic activities. Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding is an innovative approach that can provide a greater diversity of taxonomic detections, non-invasive sampling, and a lower field component cost than traditional biomonitoring methods. Taiping Island (Itu Aba Island) is one of the major coral reef islands situated in the South China Sea where underwater visual surveys documented an outbreak of Crown-of-Thorns starfish (COTS) in 2021. In our study, we used eDNA metabarcoding to investigate whether there were shifts in coral communities by comparing pre- and post-COTS outbreak communities. One metabarcoding assay targeting the 18S gene and two assays targeting the ITS2 region (one of these assays specifically targeting Acroporid corals) were applied to 42 seawater samples collected in 2019 and 2021 from 12 sites around Taiping Island. Based on these three metabarcoding assays, 52 unique hard coral species were identified, corresponding to a total of 51 species in 2019 and 26 species in 2021. Our results indicated a significant decline in coral diversity but an increase in sponge diversity from the phylum porifera at Taiping Island in 2021. We suggest that these faunal shifts may be due to active feeding and disturbance of COTS at outbreak proportions that result in habitat changes. Our findings also suggest that eDNA can continue to serve as a promising tool to monitor the change in coral as well as reef-associated taxa during devastating outbreak events.
期刊介绍:
Coral Reefs, the Journal of the International Coral Reef Society, presents multidisciplinary literature across the broad fields of reef studies, publishing analytical and theoretical papers on both modern and ancient reefs. These encourage the search for theories about reef structure and dynamics, and the use of experimentation, modeling, quantification and the applied sciences.
Coverage includes such subject areas as population dynamics; community ecology of reef organisms; energy and nutrient flows; biogeochemical cycles; physiology of calcification; reef responses to natural and anthropogenic influences; stress markers in reef organisms; behavioural ecology; sedimentology; diagenesis; reef structure and morphology; evolutionary ecology of the reef biota; palaeoceanography of coral reefs and coral islands; reef management and its underlying disciplines; molecular biology and genetics of coral; aetiology of disease in reef-related organisms; reef responses to global change, and more.