z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Fly‐derived DNA and camera traps are complementary tools for assessing mammalian biodiversity
Author(s) -
Gogarten Jan F.,
Hoffmann Constanze,
Arandjelovic Mimi,
Sachse Andreas,
Merkel Kevin,
Dieguez Paula,
Agbor Anthony,
Angedakin Samuel,
Brazzola Gregory,
Jones Sorrel,
Langergraber Kevin E.,
Lee Kevin,
Marrocoli Sergio,
Murai Mizuki,
Sommer Volker,
Kühl Hjalmar,
Leendertz Fabian H.,
CalvignacSpencer Sébastien
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
environmental dna
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2637-4943
DOI - 10.1002/edn3.46
Subject(s) - biodiversity , range (aeronautics) , environmental dna , ecology , biology , invertebrate , habitat , transect , ecosystem , abundance (ecology) , alpha diversity , materials science , composite material
Background Metabarcoding of vertebrate DNA found in invertebrates (iDNA) represents a potentially powerful tool for monitoring biodiversity. Preliminary evidence suggests fly iDNA biodiversity assessments compare favorably with established approaches such as camera trapping or line transects. Aims and Methods To assess whether fly‐derived iDNA is consistently useful for biodiversity monitoring across a diversity of ecosystems, we compared metabarcoding of the mitochondrial 16S gene of fly pool‐derived iDNA (range = 49–105 flies/site, N  = 784 flies) with camera traps (range = 198–1,654 videos of mammals identified to the species level/site) at eight sites, representing different habitat types in five countries across tropical Africa. Results We detected a similar number of mammal species using fly‐derived iDNA (range = 8–15 species/site) and camera traps (range = 8–27 species/site). However, the two approaches detected mostly different species (range = 6%–43% of species detected/site were detected with both methods), with fly‐derived iDNA detecting on average smaller‐bodied species than camera traps. Despite addressing different phylogenetic components of local mammalian communities, both methods resulted in similar beta‐diversity estimates across sites and habitats. Conclusion These results support a growing body of evidence that fly‐derived iDNA is a cost‐ and time‐efficient tool that complements camera trapping in assessing mammalian biodiversity. Fly‐derived iDNA may facilitate biomonitoring in terrestrial ecosystems at broad spatial and temporal scales, in much the same way as water eDNA has improved biomonitoring across aquatic ecosystems.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here
Accelerating Research

Address

John Eccles House
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom