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How to learn to stop worrying and love environmental DNA monitoring
Author(s) -
John A. Darling
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
aquatic ecosystem health and management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.407
H-Index - 41
eISSN - 1539-4077
pISSN - 1463-4988
DOI - 10.1080/14634988.2019.1682912
Subject(s) - environmental dna , appeal , perspective (graphical) , population , environmental monitoring , environmental resource management , data science , environmental planning , biodiversity , risk analysis (engineering) , business , computer science , political science , sociology , ecology , biology , geography , environmental science , demography , artificial intelligence , law
Environmental DNA is one of the most promising new tools in the aquatic biodiversity monitoring toolkit, with particular appeal for applications requiring assessment of target taxa at very low population densities. And yet there persists considerable anxiety within the management community regarding the appropriateness of environmental DNA monitoring for certain tasks and the degree to which environmental DNA methods can deliver information relevant to management needs. This brief perspective piece is an attempt to address that anxiety by offering some advice on how end-users might best approach these new technologies. I do not here review recent developments in environmental DNA science, but rather I explore ways in which managers and decision-makers might become more comfortable adopting environmental DNA tools-or choosing not to adopt them, should circumstances so dictate. I attempt to contextualize the central challenges associated with acceptance of environmental DNA detection by contrasting them with traditional "catch-and-look" approaches to biodiversity monitoring. These considerations lead me to recommend the cultivation of four "virtues," attitudes that can be brought into engagement with environmental DNA surveillance technologies that I hope will increase the likelihood that those engagements will be positive and that the future development and application of environmental DNA tools will further the cause of wise management.