通过公平放大eDNA的力量

Miwa Takahashi, Oliver Berry
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摘要

环境DNA (Environmental DNA, eDNA)是一种快速发展的生物监测方法,用于检测物种并绘制其分布,在过去的十年中,eDNA出版物的数量呈指数级增长。虽然在每次出版中通常会生成数百万个DNA序列并将其分配给分类群,但这些记录存储在许多位置(例如,期刊服务器上的补充材料,开放数据发布平台(如Dryad))并以各种格式存储,这使得查找,访问,重用和整合数据集变得困难。使eDNA数据公平(可查找、可访问、可互操作、可重复使用)在改善生物环境的测量方式以及如何检测和理解变化方面具有巨大的潜力。例如,它将允许在扩展的空间和时间尺度上进行生物监测和物种分布建模研究,这对于单个项目来说在后勤上是困难的或不可能的。它还将有助于“黑暗”(未分配的)DNA序列的存储,并与不断增长的最新DNA参考数据库进行重新分析。与使eDNA公平相关的几个挑战,包括如何标准化数据格式和生物信息学工作流程,以及简化出版后数据存档的过程,以便eDNA从业者可以接受。未来三年,我们计划与全球生物多样性信息设施(GBIF)和澳大利亚生活地图集(ALA)等生物多样性数据平台、eDNA科学期刊和eDNA从业者密切合作,解决这些挑战,使eDNA实现其作为支持环境管理的统一信息来源的革命性潜力。
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Amplifying the Power of eDNA by Making it FAIR
Environmental DNA (eDNA) is a fast-growing biomonitoring approach to detect species and map their distributions, with the number of eDNA publications exponentially increasing in the past decade. While millions of DNA sequences are often generated and assigned to taxa in each publication, these records are stored in numerous locations (e.g., supplementary materials at journals’ servers, open data publishing platforms such as Dryad) and in various formats, which makes it difficult to find, access, re-use and integrate datasets. Making eDNA data FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable, re-usable) has vast potential to improve how the biological environment is measured and how change is detected and understood. For instance, it would allow biomonitoring and species distribution modelling studies across extended space and time scales, which is logistically difficult or impossible for individual projects. It would also shed light on “dark” (unassigned) DNA sequences by facilitating their storage and re-analyses with updated ever-growing DNA reference databases. Several challenges are associated with making eDNA FAIR, including how to standardise data formats and bioinformatics workflows, and simplifying the process of post-publication data archiving so that it is acceptable for eDNA practitioners to adopt. Over the next three years, we plan to work closely with biodiversity data platforms such as the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) and Atlas of Living Austrlia (ALA), eDNA science journals, and eDNA practitioners, to solve these challenges and enable eDNA to achieve its revolutionary potential as a unified source of information that supports environmental management.
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